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                  <text>a - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

19'12

'

~~~~~·~~~~~· · ··~~~~

In each of us, a hung-er

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By LOUIS CASSEUi

United Press lnternatiollal
It would be ·easy for God to

1!&gt;' overwhelm us, if ' He chose, with

~ unmistakable proofs of His reality

and power.
.
But He has always reiused to do
~ th.at, He will not rev.eal His truths to
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of God and Man

men by spelling 1hem out in neon
lights.
Instead, He hides truth in
paradox, wisdom In fables. jie
. th e
seatters be au1y and goodness lil
most improbable places.
And when He chose to come in
person to dwell for a brief time
; amorig.m.en, He came - typically _
lncogmto.
.
,
Instead of appearing as a. k;na ,
-...a
clad in royal robes and seated on
throne, He came as a defenseless
baby, wrapped in swaddling clothes
ll!ld lying in a manger.
flls Arrival Proclaimed
His arrival was proclaimed, not
with trumpet blasts in the palaces of
the mighty but with a song sung by

•

angels loa few frightened shepherds
who were in the Judean fields .
keeping watch over their flocks oy
night. ·
When the shepherds hUrried away
to see the long-awaited One, they
found Hlin surrounded, not by
courtiers, but by an honor guard of
oxen and donkeys.
·
You can hardly blame the
shepherds
d for being ·surprised and a
1
lilt e isappointed. "Such a babe in
such a place - can He be the
womised Savior?"
.
·Even .· today, men often are
disappomted, and sometimes get
quite irritated with God, because He
insists on playing hide-and-seek with
us.
· He hides Hlinself deliberately in
order that we may.seek Him of our
own volition. It is our free choice.
Seek and you will find. But if you
don'tc.areenoughtohuntHlinout,to
find the clues He has dispersed
lavishly around His universe, you
may easily make it through your
entire life without ever realizing how
many times and in how many places
you have encountered Hlin.

:

·Why dOP.sHe choose to be a Hidden
God? W)ly His great reluctance to
bedazile us by inlfuding signs and
wonders into the expected
regularities of natural process?
It is always rash to try to answer
any question about God that begins
with "Why?" His ways, as an ancient Hebrew ~!mist noted, 3 re
"past our finding out." His reasons
are =.
..,. rt of the eternally tmpenetrable mystery of the Divine
nature.
B th chr·
ut e !Simas story offers us a
clue. It sugge"'·
""' that God places a
very high. value on human freedom
- m.tich higher than we are wont to
real12e. He W1ll not make His
presenee so obvious that.we have no
choice except to believe m
· H.un.
The only way He has loaded the
di ce 1s
· to unp
· 1ant m
· ea ch of us a
·hunger • a d'1m1Y sens ed . need, a
vague aware ness of di ssa1·1sfac1·1on
and m
· completeness.
"'
. "'· Augu st·me descr1·bed. 1·1 perfectly 1·n his ,.,"" nfess1ons:
·
"You have made us for y o~se If,
and our hearts are restless until they
find rest in You."

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~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ -· ~ ·~~·~~·~
· Weather
+

Chance of showers Sunday.
High Sunday in the mid 40s
south. Chance of rain Monday.
Lows in the 30s.

l

Thre~ injured, one critically, in this vehicle

Pomeroy rnan· critically inj"-'red
POMEROY - Three persons were
injured in a head~n collision on U. S.
Route 33 Friday at 6:10p.m., seven tenths
of a mile north of the Beacon service
station near the Pomeroy corporation line.
The driver of the car above, Martin
qroderick, Pomeroy, Rl. 2, remained

unconscious Saturday with a se~ere · head Deputy Robert Beegle .
Injury at St. Marys Hospitsl, Hunt.lngton.
Broderick of Pomeroy, Rt. 2, ·was
He is listed In serious condition. Parts of travellng north and the other car was
the other car were imbedded In traveling south driven by Richard Lee
Broderick's car.
W~!ffisley, 26, Shade. The can colllded In
Investigating the accident were Robert
(Continued on page 3)
C. Hartenbao)l, Meigs County Sheriff, and

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 11,500
. Families. '

tmts

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

30 PAGES

VOL VII NO. 47

THREE SECTIONS
Pomeroy-Middleport

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1972

anes
. I

SAIGON (UPI) -American ,warplan.;
blasted North Vietnam's heartland in the

Gallipolis-Point Pieasant

15 CENTS

ast

Ua-'ey.'S Wl•lt take OVer

sixth day of relenU~ss around-the-clock
bombing Saturday, apparently flying into nl • ..,
the fiercest missile fire they have ever
faced. Hanoi sai4 Its antiaircraft shot
down two more B52 bombers.
In Saigon, South Vietnamese intelligence sources said they intercepted a
North Vietnamese radio message
reporting the death of Hanoi Defense
MINERSVILLE - Mr. and
Minister Vo Nguyen Giap. The sources
claimed Glap was killed in an explosion as Mrs. Ralph Harvey of Minersville, at right, are the new
(Continued on page 3)
superintendent and matron of
the Meigs County children's
home, appointed last week by
the county commissioners to
succeed Mr. and Mrs . Harry
Clark .
Mr. Harvey Is employed at
Ohio University, having
worked there the psst five
years. Mrs. Harvey was

superintending Meigs
county children's home

-

'

Decorated
homes win
appliances

•••
CHRI~AS TIME - Todd and Kim Adama, 3and 4, posed for this Christmas
Eve photograph at their rome on High St., Pomeroy. They are the children of Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Adams. Mr. Adams Is principal of Ute Southern High School in
Racine. The ·accompanying poem is dedicated to them, and to all children who
make Ute Christmas season so delightful :

On the night before Christmas,

At this Glorious and Holy time, we wish for all mankind the
great gifts of pea ce and joy, faith and love. May our spirits be uplifted,
and our hearts filled with' happiness and contentment, as we cherish anew
the glorious message and meaning of Christmas. For the confidence and loyalty

NATIONAL BANK
· . MIDDLEPORT, OHI O

BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO.
POM EROY, OHIO

NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY, O.

'

RUTLANO.O.

'

RACINE, OHIO

I

Then off to the fireplace,
To check each detail,
They're hoping that Santa
Will come without fail.

Far too soon this beauty,
Each Child must leave,
This magical fantasy,
Called Christmas Eve.

. GALUPOUS - Jim Pratt, Rt. 1,
·Cheshire, an unsuccessful Democrat
.candidate for sheriff, failed to file an
expense statement prior to the 4 p.m.
deadline Friday.
Pratt will be unable to seek public office
for five yeara,
Cindidllea filing expenses were Joe
Stewart, Democrat for commissioners,
$447.03; Stewart for Commissioner
committee, ~.80; Tres.'ll. Cremeens,
Democl'lt, ~bert of Courts $214.91; James
S. Saunders, Republican for sheriff, $100;
Oty M. Stewirt, Republican for treasurer,
me.•; Clln- E. Johnson, Republican
for cOIIUJiialjoner, t;J23.52; Glenn A.
Smith, Republican for engineer, · $300;

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL Un.L

POMEROY

Next, away to their dream land,
Of miraculo)ls joy,
An enchanted world shared,
By each girl and boy.

Expenses n:ot filed

of those whom we are privileged to serve, we wish to express deepest gratitude.·

FARMERS

Little Kim and Todd,
Will don their J&gt;&lt;IJamas,
Say a prayer to God.

f

(lharles Gene Wetherholt, $306; Evalee
Myers, Republican for recorder, $365.4(1;
Marjorie Rinehart, Republican for clerk of
courts, $S66.49 ; R. William Jenkins,
Democrat for Probate Judge, f400.08;
Denver· Walker, Republican for county
comml!sioner, $3S5. Both the Democratic
and Republican Central Commitlfts filed
statements.
HUGHES SAFE
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Howard
Hughes, the billionaire American indusbialtst and recluse, apparenUy lUI'·
vlvec' the earthquake In Managua;
Nicaragua, without injury, hlJ spokesman
here said.
'

POMEROY - Pomeroy's annual
holiday . home decorating contest . sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce was judged Friday night. .
First place winners in the overall
·religious and overall non-religious
categories were presented appliance
prizes while all others with the exception
of the public buildings division received
cash awards.
Selected as first place winner ln the
overall non-religious category was the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Walker,
Union Ave. Second place went to the home
of Mr. and Mrs. James Soulsby, Union
Ave., with third place going to the home of
Mr. and Mrs. James McHaffie, 838 East
Main St. A certificate of merit for
honorable mention went to Sharon. Cogar,
Butternut Ave.
First place in the overall religious
division went to the home of Mr . and Mrs.
E. F. Robinson, Mulberry Ave., with
secohd place to the home of Mr. and Mrs.
James Hawley on East Main.
In the entrance or doorway judging,
first place went to the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, High St.; second place
to Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, Uncoln
Heights., and third to Mr. and Mrs. Robert
. Lewis, Spring Ave. A certificate of merit
for honorabl~ mention was awarded the
home of Mr.. and Mrs. John William
Blaettnar, Wr.tgh~ St.
.
Both the Ch1ldren's Home and the
Meigs County Infirmary were presented
certificates of merit in the publlc bulldlnp
category and resident. of both eatabllJJ&gt;.
ments will he treated to lee cream and
cookies after the first of the year.
Chainnan of the judging was Scott
Lucas, ma¥or of Cheshire, who waa
assisted by mep~bera of the commtttee
heading the conteat on behalf of the
Chamber of Commerce, Thla committee
included Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis,
Wendell Hoover and Tom ca~ll .

TOYS NEEDED
POMEROY - The Salvation
Army In Pomeroy is still in
need of good used toys to be
given to needy iamilies for
Christmas. They can be left at
the Army's Hq. at 115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.

associated ·with the Meigs
County ASCS office for 10
years.
The Harveys, who love
children, recently adopted
Ralph Junior (whom Mrs.
Harvey is holding). The couple
will begin their duties at Ute
home on Jan. 3, 1973. Mr .
Harvey, who is the son of Mr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Hollis
Harvey of Radcliff, Ohio, Is a
3?nd degree Mason and a
member of Orphan Fl'lenda
Masonic Lodge 275 F&amp;AM
Wilkesville.
Mrs. Harvey is the daughter
of Mrs. Edna Hart, 226 Union
Ave., Pomeroy. The Harveys
are looking forward to their
new assignment. Mr. Harvey
will continue his employment
at Ohio University.

RIO TOURNAMENT CHAMPS- F1ashing victory signs
In the locker room at Lyoe Center following Friday night's
championship triumph over previously unbeaten Concord
College are members of Coach Steven Schoenherr's Northwood of Indiana College Blue Devils. Northwood of West
Baden , Ind. won the Rjo Holiday Jnvitstlonal Tournament

with an 84-77 victory over the Mountain Lions. Front row left
to right are Otis broughton, Kevin &amp;low, Mike Oden,
Cunnmgham, Larry Weber, the tourney's moet valuable
player; and Mike O.en. Rear - Ma•s.. llld alllaant
coach ; Phil Mey.. , Bob we, Mike Bu1er, Paul Wtea aad
~ch Schoenherr. (See game details 011 Plte 18, and lid·
ditlonill pictures on J&gt;&lt;lge 18):

Cunt

�r

3-The Swulay Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 24, 1972

North hit .

'1-'l'toi ...... TIIIa·......._bda.Y. Dec.M.Im

Ch

Had&amp;'

doJt a tkcr11

oKI from
ca-r Augtllhll that tHnl
all tile 1DOrld
tiiDt&amp;ld be e1lf'OIIri .•• Aftd all wenf
to be ellrollcd, each to hfl OVIII cUv. And
IOUph. Cillo Wilt 11p /TOIII Galilee; from
tile dt1l of NIIZilreth, to Judea, !Q the
cUll of Dcwid, which II called Btthlt·
lleil&amp;, btcallae lie 1001 of tile horue and
lftiHQe of Datrid, to be enrolled with
lfllt'l/, 1111 b t t r 'o t he d, who 10a1 with
child. A!ld while tile!/ were tlure, the
hiM camc for ller to be delivered. And
•lie 1/Gk birth to her first-bona Jon a!ld
~~m~pJ~td him in IID&lt;Jddlill(l c!othl, and
laid llim' in a 1114nger, becarue there
""" no place for tllem in the inn.

'" tllolc

Luke 2:1·1
By D~VID POIJ ~G .
The thoughts and memor1es of Christ·
mu may be the ·most powerful force that
we can uper:ience. For Christians, It ls a
blend (I(Jospel accounts describlnf the
CCIQIU.,
Chrllt. And fqt the lndlv1dual,
lt draws together the joys and comfort of
chlldboocl, lamlly, and home. And ln a
hec:tle, ever'Changlng culture, this counts
for much .
J
In her cluslc, "Death COmes for the
Arcbblahop," WIDa C&amp;tber vividly describe• the mlui01181'y efforta of Bishop
·Jean Lamy lo the grea~ SOuthwest a cen·
, t,.-y aao. In tbls vaat, bUsh, rugged land
of mouufaln and desert, a dedlcated
ChriltlaD broulbt III!W vlta!Jty to an ancleDt l'tllon of North America. It was a
toUIII, 'Ciem•ndlng vocation. Living on the
edge of the wilderness In Santa Fe, Miss
•C&amp;ther describes the season which we now
celebrate:
"It wu late afternoon of Christmas Day,
and the BllbOp sat at his desk writing
letters. SIDce liis return to Santa Fe his
offtclal correspondence· bad been .heavy ;
but the ciDRiy '!Pl'ltten sheets over which
be bent with a thoughtful smile were not
to go to Mol!llgnorl, or to Archbishops, or
to the beads of· religious houses-but to
.

Time To Give A Little

Americans Don't
Want 'Revolution'
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
(First ol Four Articles.)
WASIDNGTON (NEAl
1
Some of America's lotellectuals are in a departure
from hlstor!W pattern, taking a great Interest right now
in tbelr own country. Tbe reason: They thlok the "res!
molutloD" Is happening here.
TlleJ look about them aild see nearly all four of our rna·
lor IDitltut10111 under heavy attack-the political system
bns!na, education, religion, the famUy and its :ways.
. TlleJ 1rgue, of courae, that this Is good, and they ftnd
It occurriDa nowhere else on earth with comparable force
and lpeed. 1
At least a few of the approvln• intellectuals believe
the -lilt won'~:f. unW Ame~n · .llmlt11tlons have
bee11 radically aJ
1 lo ~ Cll81 UOq 1lmJ.it \files.
No one ean queatlon that the attac:k hu been goln&amp; on
or that It alreaciJ bu produced some ~Jmfl~pt .~h"IJ!'·
Nor ean anyone fairly contend there should be no
clwip since chance is a Jaw of life.
, It II quite pollible to disagree, however, wlth the notion tbat the eountry'a lostltutlons are In fot a truly radi·
cal mabover. Admittedly, the pace of change Is faster
thlll It used to be, but thit's true of almost eve~hlog
thele days. Most probably, the net consequence Will not

T-ty-third PrNident BenJamin Horrioon
(Adminlotrotlon: March 4, 1889-Morch 3, 1893)

'Now I walk with God'
I

Fi\·e nf the first six r•st-Ci,·il War Presidents
· were llom in Ohio ant scn·cd as Unicm :\rmy
officers.during the war. Fourth in this line of sucCCllsinn was !knjamin Harrison, .who had the
~'Sid&lt;:ll(:y and military qualifications but linlc else
to ru:ummcnd him for the P~-sidcncy .
One ljndistinguisht-d term as a U.S. scnatur had
lll.'ell Harri!CCilt's only prio'r pnlitic;tl post.
But destiny found the presidential cupboard
allllllllt \."lllpty at ·the Republican cnn\'ention at
ChiCIIJ'l! in Ul88. James G. Blaine ,\·a.~ the must
popul1r and most influential Repuhlkan, but he
"-. unweD and ,·acationing in St1llland. When a
dellllllck~·elnpcd hem'c:enjohn Sherman nfOhin
Walter Q, Gmham of lndi•na, pcarty lt'8dcrs

w·

..... Blliae fur ad\'it'\:.
.
'!lfte Harri11111,~ Blaine c3l:.led.
'flw com·eution wok Harrison, and Rt-puhlican

..,.n toOkfmhimtul of

on tu the Presidenc:y. lndusPresident CJe,'cland's low-

-I!Wllt,

•

By Ilelen and Sue Qotte1
RAP:
.
. ·Duke II a sweet guy with a million frlelida. He say1 be IOvl!ll
me, but aameliwei I IIlii* he'• jult eDI'dalng his llqa. No,
lllat's not true, be DOl!'.'! love me bat ...
He's got no Idea of time. SllowiDg up an hour and a half late
for' dates LI•Jmoet "early" fill' him. OfteD h6 ~'t lbow at all.
Geta illvolved with other people and forgets he told me be'il be
over. No wonder he dol!lln't keep appointments. He's probably
told ten other &amp;lends he'd meet THEM .too. He's just plain

-~· I try to make a joke of his "UmeleaslieBB," (it isn't juat wlth
.

,me, bill With everyone), and once ltoldblmplaln out bow I ate
Wa!Ung and that I bad to know where I,stood. He just hugged me
·and laid I worry too much -and I feU in low with him all over '
again.

be drastic enough to win the Intellectuals' final applause.
For one thing, a lot of the attack comes from tiny
bands of dissenters who contrive, by volume of noise and
o.b~r attention-getting tactics, to make their efforts seem
larger and more significant than they are.
For another, to the extent larger numbers of Ameri. cans are Involved, the evidence suggests that the assault
J:. not bent toward purposeful revolution but is instead
an uerclae In frustration, a kind of wild flailing away at
Institutions which seem l!lfreeponsive to popular needs.
The lnti!llectual may ~sk: What's the difference so long
as people's energies are being expended in attacks which
may bring down these structures?
'
The dlfference Is huge. Nothing Illustrates the fact
better than the 1972 election. The sweeping verdict for
Richard Nixon wu a de~lsion among other things against
radlcal change. As one reporter has JlOinted out, this same
characteristic of caution was exhibited in the small spe·
clfics of the vote In California on various propositions.
The far-out proposals went down.
The thing to say, then, is not that there is no attack
upon American Institutions, but that inteUectuals who
read It as "revolution" are grossly misreading it.
Indeed, a better case could be made out that the United
States was closer to revolutionary change in the Great
when a third of the work force was unem' Depression,
ployed. That, for sure, was a time of breaking bonds and
lnsUtuUonal overhaul. Yet, lt has to be remembered that
. in six years the steam was out of the New Deal. Franklin
D. Roosevelt turned his mind to the war and it was World
War II, not sweeping social change, which cured the
country's lingering 10 million unemployed.
No, Americans today are not questing after revolution. But they are In a unique situation, which makes life
In 1972 tantali~lngly troublesome even as it avoids the
dark depths of 1932.

''Better late than ~·· I guess,

Lut Friday l got really burned after spending all eveliing
drn ~up for nothing when be SAID we'd go to a.show. So 1
made plans to go out of town with friends this weekend. 1 juat
won't be there when be calls.
~1?-M.B.

DearM.:
· You certainly should! 'I!le guy may care for you - and a lot
ol other people - but he needs some dlsclpllne In his Ufe. He's
getting away wlth murder by expecting everyope to ~YSlt around
f!n'blm, juat ~cauae he'sa ''nlceguyW!thlotsoHrlends." ,
Nezt date be n;18kes, leave wl\hout him if I.e doein't shaw on
time. And leave a message on the door : 1'Toomsnywalts, breaks

dates." --SUE.
DearM.:
· "Better late than never"? SO long as you let your boy friend

go this route you'll never know where you stand. And who needs
the Walt Watcher award of the year?
TeD him "Betterneverthanalwayslate!" And mean ltl H be
Is hopelessly undependable, you'd better know it now than later.
-Helen.

TeleViiion Log
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24

. Dear Rap :
I got an Invitation to a birthday party, and lnstesd of
"R.,S.V.P." It bad on the bottom, "B.Y.O.B." COuldn't go, as I
had other plans, but what does "B.Y.O.B." mean? -N.W.I. (Not
With It, Maybe?)
Dear N.W.I. :
B.Y.O.B. means "Bring your own booze."-Helen and Sue.

6:UO-FIIm 4.
6: Jo-This Week 4; Newsmaker '72 13; Bob Harrl'l!llon 6; Voice
In the Bello.
.
7:00-Communlque 6; Old Time Gospel Hoor 13; Blaotoff 10;
This Is the Answer 3; Time for Timothy 4.
7:30-Falth for Today 8; Revival Flreo 6; Herald of Truth 3; Dear Rap:
I
Lamp Unto My Feet 10.
Our llllllher dled 19 years ago. Our Dad just recently started
8:00-Leonard Repaos 8; Gospel .Caravan 6; Church Service 13;
Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4; Billy James Hargis and gobig out with Cindy who Is a great person.
His All-American Kids 10.
·
All was goU., ..,II until she ended It a couple of weeks ago.
8:3o-Oral Roberts 3; You! Health 4; Day of Dlacovery 8; Rex
Humbard 13; Revival Fires 13r Kathryn Kuhlam 6; Camera We really like her and tbe two of them got along g~t. Ia there
Three 10.
any way we can get them hac:k together again? They're still
, 9:00-Singlng Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel4; Rex Humbard 15; Oral frlmds. - Two Cellcerned Teenage Daughters
Roberto 10; Archie's TV Funnies 8,
·
· 9:30-Church by Side of Road 4; Good News 13; Cartoons 10; Dear TCI'D:
Rex Humbard 8.
Tbls ~ hu got to be totally up to your father and ,
10:00-Church Service 4; Faith for Today 15; Curiosity Shop 6,
andy. Let him lmow you like her a lot, but otbenrlae stay clear.
13; This Is the Life 3; Tidings of Great Jor,, 10.
10: 30-This Is the Life 15; Insight 4; Capta n Noah 3; Old Time '-&amp;it.
Gospel Hour 8.
11:00-TV Chapell; Consumer Report 15; Focus on Columbus 4; Dear Two:
I don't euetly agree with Sue: If you want aamelhm, to·
Brother Buzz 6; Bullwlnkle 13; Cartoons 10.
11 :3()-Make A Wloh 6, 13; CMreach 15; Sports Challenge 3; uppea, )'llU 111111t help It along. Get these two together wttb
CPBA Bowling 6; Pro Footbl!ll Pre-Game Show 8, 10. •
· lllrafllile pl•mdog . For lltarten: cont1n1111 your frUindshlp with
1 ~: 00-Calvln Evans 13; At Issue 3; sacred Heart )5; NFC
Playoff 8, 10. .
andy. Wbal ;vou find out wily abe IX'Oke olf, yoo'll know better
12:3()-Revlval Fires 13; Meellha Preu3, 4, 15.
·
'11.'),
&gt;IU&lt;l•i,ll&gt;J' ~~n)J~"'l"-·
"~- &gt;I .....
1:00-Lower Llghlhoose 13; 'NFL Ginie of the w..k 31 Dlrec· .bow to Jloceed.
Good
Lacll:J-HoJen
I
J'J'
•I
•0&lt;'11
1
lions 6; Church by the Side of ihe Road 4; Fa ill! for Today 15.
1: 30-Movle, "The Snow Quun" 3; Film 4; Blue Rl• Quartet
.. 13; TBA 15.. .

,

, ,.

•

· r ..,.

2:00-Polhl of View 6; Man From UNCLE 4; Point of View 6;
_ .SI~x T.~"'- 13: Roller Derby 15.
·
·
2:3o-Jake's "Place o, tJ.
3:00-NFC Playoff 3, ~ . 15; Mister Rodgers 6; TBA 8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
.
.
3&gt;30-Untamed World 6; Rookies 13; MOvie, "The Bells of St. .
Mary'o" 10.
.
·
4:00-Wacky World of Jonathan Winters 6; VIrginian 8;
Chrlstmao Around the World" 33.
4:3()-World ot Survlal 13; Bach Festival 20, 33.
5:00-Ripples 33; Doddletown Piper&amp; 6; Movie "The Miracle'.'
13.
5: 30-Shenandoah College Choir 8.
6:00-Green Acres 3; News4; Pope Paul Vl'o Midnlght Mass6;
60 Minutes 8, 10; NFL Repo•t 15.
6: Jo-News 3, 4, 15.
tariff siand and pressed relentlessly hy Republican
7:GO-'-La.wrence Welk 13; safari to Adventure 3; This Is Your
campaign managers, made unprectxlcntcd contrihu·
Llfe4 ; Wild Kingdom 15; Walt Till Your Father Gets Home 6;
UFOS ; lntheKnow10;Zoom20,33.
·
· tions w Republican coffc;rs.
7:
3()-Juot
Generation
33
(
1.at'•
Make
a
Deal
6;
Annal&amp; The
Even so, Cleveland nutpollcd I Iarrison by more
King 10; World of Disney 3, 15; Movie "A Chrlotmu Carol"
20 .. _
' ''
than 100,000 votes, alth·&gt;ugh Harrison \1 JS an easy
8:
()C}-FI\1
6&lt; 13.LM,sh 8, 10; Caroling, Caroling 33,
winner in the electoral coiiL'gC, 233 to 168, when
8:30-French Chef 20, 33; Sandy Duncan 8, 10; Mcl.&gt;oo~ J, •· 15;
_ Fac&lt;!,of ChJistma• 33. ....... .
he got the pivotal votes nf New York.
9:00-Masterplece Theatre 20, 33; Dick Van Dyke 1, 10; MOVIe,
The rigidly pious Harrison was so overcome
"Those Darl1 Young Men In Their Jaunty Jalopies" 6, 13.
election hight by his political resurrection tha t he
9:3o-Mannlx 8, 0.
. ·
.
10:00-Firlng
Line
20;
Nl~t
Gallery
3,
~ . 15.
declaml "Now · I walk with GcH.I. Providence has
10: 3o-Protectors 41 Evil ouch 8; High Road to Adventure 10;
given us the victory ."
Pollee Surgeon 15; We Ink You Should Know 3.'
11
:00-News.
Weather, $port] 3 4. i.1o, 15 . .
. In a long, rambling inaugural address rcminis'11: 15-Rose Bowl Bound 4; Chr1stm•s Olrois 8, 10. .
'cent of his grandfather's inaugural speech 48 years
11 :3()-Movle, "Nobody's Perfect" 3; ABC News 6, 13; A
Christmas Concert 4; Christmas Music 15; Leitha Desert Be
before, Harrison advocated a high protective tariff,
Joyful 8, 10.
stricter immigration laws, warned that a treasury
12:00-Midnlght Maos 4, 15; Cal)dlellght Service 8, 10; Messiah
13.
' '
surplus was a "serious c~il" that should be appl ied
1:00-Movle, "Three Coi~s In the Fountain" 13.
to the rL-demption of the! public debt-Harrison
3:00-News 13.
inherited a debt of $1,664,461 ,536.22 which hi s
MONDAY, DEC. 25, lf72
6:00Sunrise
Seminar
4.
:\dministration reduced slightly-and aggrt'Ss ively
6:15- Farm Report 13. · .
6:20 - Paul Harvey 13.
rest ted the Monroe Doctrine as :\merids foreign
6:30
- Coiumbuo Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Children's Special
policy.
13.
'
6:45 - CorncOb Report 3. .
The two major measures passed in Harrison's
7: 00 - Today 3, 4, 15; lo(ews, Weather, Sports 6; CBS News 8, 10;
:\dministration were the Sherman Silver Purchase
Fllntstones 13.
7:25- Sports 13. '
:\ct, which caustxl a gold drain, which in turn led
7:30- Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jaffer$ 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
to the Panic of 1893 , and the McKinley Tariff Act,
13.
which practically climinatL~I foreign cumpetitinn
8:00 - Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
· Lassie 6.
with the highest tariffs in the nation's history, caus.8:30- Jack Lal.anne 13; Romper RoomS; New Zoo Review 6;
· Paul Dixon ~ .
·
ing a general upward spiral in prices for consumers.
8:55
Local
News
13.
Secretary of State Blaine meanwhil e carried out
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Cal'f. Ka"ll'lroo 8;
a· vigorous and forward-looking foreign policy. The
Concentration 6; Friendly Junction 10; Pope Paul ·VI'•
Midnight
Mass13; Mister Rogers33; Green Acres3. ·
fir~'t Pan-American Conference met in Wash ington,
9:30- To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy6; Hazell; Eltc:trlc Co. 33.
and a treaty for the annexation nf Hawaii-whose
10:00 - Joker's Wild 8, 10; Christmas ,Day Service 3, 4. 15;
Messiah 6 ; A Christmas Carol 33.
Queen !-iliuokalani had been removt~l from her
10:30 - Price Is Rights, 10; Concentration 3, 15; Split Second 13;
throne by a group of Americans- was one of the
NaVy Christmas 6.
11
:00
- sate otthe Century 3, 15; Gambill, 10; Elec. Co. 20: San
last measures President Harrison sent to the Seninc
Antonio Chrlslmas Service 6, 13; Phil Donahue 4.
before he was rL-plat'\:d in the Presidency by the
11:30 :- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame
St. ~OJ 33.
.
, 11:00
man he had replaced.
- eopardy 3, 15; Pauword 6; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4;
:\ direct dt'SCcndant &lt;,If a distinguished lineage
Contact 8; News 10; Messiah 13.
12: 25 - CBS News 8.
going back tel 17th-century Virginia cnlonial days,
12: 30 - Spii1Stcond6; SearchfotTomori'OWa, 10; News3; 3 W's·
Harrison paid scant attention to his ancestry, pre3, 15; Houle Consort 33.
1:00All My Chlld...... 6, 13; New-.WMther, Sporl$3; Jacklt
ferring the path of rcligicms dei'Otion taught him
Oblinger 8; Green Acrn tO; Watch Yoor Child 15.
by his mother, Elizabeth Irwin Harrison . "I pray
1:30- 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Mike A 0..16, 13; As The
World Turns 1, 10.
for you daily,." she wrote to him while he was in
2: 00 - Days o1 Our Ll- 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
c:nllcgc, "that you may he kept frum sinn ing ;md
Douglas 6; Guiding Light 1, 10; Plot to Overthrow Chrtslmal
33.
'
.
straying from the paths of dUty. "
2:30 Docton 3, 4. 15; l!dgl flf Nlghl I. 10;
Many questioned Benjamin Harrison's mnccpt
The
Another Wtrtd I. 4. Ill Low II A
of duty, but no one t~luld reasonably question his
10.
ck-dication to it. ""r was there C\'er the slightest
i.. 4. 151 NBA lll*tlllell6. 131
whisper against the moral hcha\'inr uf the man who
taught a men's Sunday sch•••l class in Indianapolis'
for .. 0 yean , who led his regiment in prayer during
the war, who conducted a daily prayer session in
the White House and who was the nation's only
6:
Presbyterian President clcctt-d by the Republicans
6:
until Owighr Eisenhower hccamc the sccnnd one
in 195.1 .
7:

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

•
•

Generation Rap

France, to Auvercne. to 1111 own little
town; to a certalD &amp;reY, windlog ~t.
peved with cobbles IIIII •haded by ~I
cbestnuts ·..."
For Bishop Lamy1 and for IDIDY of us,
Christmas calls us oome. And If we can.
not ~ch that place wbere life had its
start, that fireside with young parents and
favorite first-friends, we mate a nosJ;allgic
· journey that ls not without Its joys. There
are some abroad who are ever puttlilg
down our pollshlog of · memories, our
treasuring ol the pest. Words like "senti·
mental,'' "memory/ ' and uchUdhood..
seem absent from vocabulary, unless U5ed
in a .derl$1ve manner. Fortunately for all.
of us\ 1the memories of Christmas pall!
race m with power and perspaslon and
colilfort..
·
Christmas reminds us that the CllrQtiiui ·
experience had a begiMing at a deflllite
lime and place. The source '1f8S a f~, ·
the condition, childbirth, the surr1mnding~
-withlo a home. Here God cllose to &lt;reveal Himself in Jesus Christ IIIII tel ex.
press that revelation in Jove. So witll our
own families. Here we first expede~~Cecl
love and caring, respect and forSiveDess,
hopes and dreams. This season elills us to
research these belinnlngs and renew these
vislDI!I of what life can be.
When Albert Schweitzer was suffering a
severe nervous depression, some say a
men~ breakdown after World War I, his
pbysjclan in Swl~erland urged him to
reach back into childhood, to recall ,the
happy days of hts youth, to remember his ·
loving parents and home-for ' here he
would find, again, the strength and support to overcome his present dlfllcul!ies.
And he dld, eventually Jubllshing,
"Memories of · Childhood a
Youth"
•
bringing happiness to thousands of readers
around the world and bringing new life
to himself. Christmas baa that power. And
it brings joy to the whole world.
Merry Christmas!

IIUCE BIOSSAT

(Continued from page 1)
he . inspected bomb damage at Haiphong
Friday.
·
ANorth Vietnamese spokesman ·in Paris
said tile deatll report was made up ,by the
U.S. Cen~ral Intelligence Age~y as a
psycholog~cal warfare ploy. "It is an out·
and-out invention . of the CIA ," · the
spokesman said. The U.S. command In
Saigon hild "no comment" 'ID the report.
'I!le U.S. 'COmmand acknowledged that
two more B52 Stratofortresses the ninth
and lOth this week, were shot do~ Friday.
Radio Hanoi, however, claimed North
Vietnamese gunners shot down two more
Saturday, bringing to 17 the nwnber of
B52s tile North Vietnamese bave claimed
•downed .since bombing resumed north of
the 20th parallel Monday.
· The B52 downings left · at least ·55
American airmen missing in action since
Monday night -the heaviest such toll of
the war. Radio llano! bas listed the names
of 15 U.S. a innen it says have been captured in the bombing assault. ·
A U.S. command spokesman said Air
Force, Navy and Marine pilots had more
than 100 Soviet built SAM2missiles fired at
them on each of the first four days of the
bombing offensive. From April 6, when
President Nixon ordered the renewed
bombing of North Vietnam, until tile start
of tile stepped-up air war Monday, only
2,800 SI\M2 missiles had been fired at
American planes.
Military sources believed the North
VietnameSe received large shipments o.f
replacement SAMs after President Nixon
limited bombing to points south of the 20th
parallel of north latitude Oct. 23 in a good.
· will gesture.
, ·
In the ground war, for the first time
siBce the siege of Kontum City was lifted
June 14, North Vietnamese troops began
massing Saturday south of Fire Base
November, within four miles north of the
city.
In three small battles within a mile of
the base during the day, a total of 42
COmmunists were killed. Three South
Vietnamese died and 18 were wounded,
military spokesmen told UP! reporter
Matt Franjol~ at Pleiku.
·
La~ Saturday the base began receiving
heavy shell fire and esrly In the evening
.communications with the base were lost
an;j a tactical emergenCy declared. AU.S.
Air Force AC130 Spectre gunship was sent
to the seen~. Rac!io contact was reestablished witllin about two hours with an
Am.erlcan ildviser in a tank, who said other
· antermas had been shot away.
'Military spokesmen told Franjola the
situation was ''very confused" and it was
not known whether COmmunists were in or
around the base perimeter.
In Saigon, SOutll Vietnam's Foreign
Ministry armounced goverrunent troops
wiJI observe a 24-hour Olristmas holiday
truce, beginning at ·a p.m. Sunday.
Thursday night the Viet COng's clandestine Uberatlon 'Radio armounced the
COmmunists· would observe a 24-bour
cease.fire beginning at 1 p.m. Sunday.
The U.S. command, declining to
"iliscuss future 9J1erational matters," said
it had notlling to say about a Christmas
holiday truce. However, a command
spokesman said that "very little time
would be needed to Implement a Christmas ceaseflre.
UP! correspondent Helen Thomas,
reporting from Key Biscayne, Fla., where
President Nixon Is spending the holiday,
said she had learned that U.S. bombing of
North Vietnam would be halted in line witll
the arrangements made by the Soutll
Vietnamese.

by Patterson· and Patrick

'

.

Care Line hegins January' 1st

.

Clock 4; Soonds of Joy 33.
•
7:30 - To Tell The Truth 6; EpisOde Action 33; Yoong Dr.
Kildare 8; Hollywood Squares 4; capital Unlveril!'f Cholr 10;
Movie "The Little Fugitive" 13; Caroling, Caroling 20.
8:00- UFO 6; Tho American Experience 3; Opening Night:
USAB, 1~; Sleeping Beauty20, 33; Laugh In 15.
9:00- Here's Lucy 8, 10; Movie "The Railway Chlldr"!'" 3, 4,
15; Nortfi.Sooth Shrine Game 6, 13.
9:30 - Doris Day 8. 10; Book Beat 20; International Per·
formanca 33.
10:00- Bill Cosby 8, 10; Newo 20.
II:OO~Nows3,4,6,8, 10, 15.
11:30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Movie "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" 8;
"Moulin Rouge" 10.
· II: 45- Johnny Carson 4.
12:00- News 6, 13.
12:30- Movie "Lad: A Dog" 13.
1:00- Focus on Columbus 4.
1:30- News 4.
2:30 - News 13.
TUESDAY, DEC. 26, 1972
-6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; sacred Heart 10.
· 6:15- Farm Report 13; Farmtlme 10.
6:20- Paul Harvey 13.
6:25 "" Faith For Today 13,
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Concern &amp; Com.
ment-10; Faith For Today 13. .
'
6: 45 - CorncOb Report 3.
7:00- Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; News 6; Fllntstones 13.
7:30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Bullwlnkle a. Rocky ··
13.
8:00- Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Timmy a. Laosle 6. .
8:30- Jack La l.anne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Revue 6.
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Concentration 6;
Friendly Junction 10; Ben casey 13; Captain Kangaroo· 8; :
G,...n Acres 3; Mister Rogero 33.
,
9:30- To Tell The Truth 3; Joopardy6; Hazell; Electric Co. 33.
10:00- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Dick Van Dyke 13; Joker's Wild 8, TO;
Columbus Six Calling 6.
10:30- Concentration 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; Split Second 13;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
11:00 - sate Of The Cantury 3, 15: Love American Style .6;
Gambit 8, 10; Password 13; Electric Co. 20.
11:30- Hollywood Squares3, 4, 15; Love Of Life 8, 10; Bewitched
6, 13; Sesame Street 2Q.
•
12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; BOb Braun'o 50·50 Club 4; Password 6;
Jackie Oblinger I; News 10, 13.
·
12: 25 - CBS News 8.
12: ~:-3 W'oGame3, 15; Split Second6; Sear.ch lor Tomorrow a,

'

4 Bidwell ladies

win commendation
GALLIPOLIS - Members of the Gallia
County Volunteer Emergency Squad last
week expressed their "sincere ap·
preciation" to four ladies in the Bidwell
community, · Mrs. Norce Knotts, Mrs.
Ethel Dewitt, Mrs. Joanne Bass, and Mrs.
Yvonne Jacobs.
These lour ladies made a door-to-door
canvass in the Bidwell community the past
week collecting $351 lor the local
emergency squad. The donation will be
used to help pay for the new emergency
ambulance expected to arrive in Gallipolis
this week.
The local Squadmen also thank everyone
who has donated thus far.

Ruff appointed to
board of elections
..
~

'

•" }.(j

!'

'
Ml"~

GALLIPOLIS - Frank Ruff).Centerwille
merchant, and chairman of the · Ghllia
County Democratic Executive Committee,
has been named to the Gallia County.
Board of Elections. Ruff succeeds the late
Joseph Straight. .
Ruff, wl)o operates a grocery store in
Centerville, has been active in Democrat
politics many years. He also serves on lhe
Democratic central committee for C~ n­
terville Pet.
Last week the Republican Executive
Committee named Rupert Trout of
Gallipolis to fill the unexpired term of the
late Lawrence Green of Evergreen. Other
members of the Gallia County Board of
Elections are F. Dale Allensworth of
Cheshire, a Republican and Charles Bane
of Lower River Rd., a Democrat.

W

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. was
busy Friday . night investigating · traffic accide n l~
tha t involved six vehicles and a
big buck deer.
At -9:46 p.m. on private
property, Southern Local High
School parking lot, four cars
got entangled. Karolina
Thoma, Racine, Rt. 2, was
stopped in line of traffic
following the Eastern-Southern
basketball game when her car
was struck in the rear by one
driven by Vi cki .L. Car r,
Coolville, Rt. 2. Behind the
Carr vehicle was a third driven
by Claude D. Nease, Minersville, who got stopped, but
backed up and hit a car stopped
behind him driven by Richard
S. Stettler, Chester.
There was minor damage to
all the cars except Stettler's
which had heavy damage'.
There were no injuries and no
citations issued.
• p.m . at tbe J n- ,
At• 11:25
1
.. ,

(Continued from page i)
the south bcu~d la~e .
Wamsley • his wife, Charolette, and
Broderick were taken by the Pomeroy ER
squad to Veterans Memorial flospital,
tllentransferredtoHolzerMedi~alCenter .

Mrs. Wamsley suffered lacerations to her
scalp and face and was treated and
released. Wam:'leyhada broken jaw alid a
severe lacerallon of his chin, and all his
Ieeth were knocked out. Broderick later
was trans!erred to Huntington Hospital.
Also called to the scene was
Prosecuting Attorney Bernard Fultz. The
Sheriff's Dept. said the accident is still
under investigation.
·

ONU executive is dead .·
CAPE CORAL, Fla. (UPI) - Dr.
Warner G. Peterson, a former business
manager and treasurer at Ohio Northern
University, died at his ho.me here Frldsy
mght after a six-month illness. Private
services are to be held, ·Tuesday at Ft.'
Myers, Fla.
'
Peterson retired as executive vice
Pres1'den ! an d ! reasurer a t Beth any
~ ~Colte&amp;e'- W~i-. e .'he also Was tennis coaCh,
e
' his teams
d be een
. postin.'g a 13"7
~ recor
1952 and 1970. They won eight team
championships.

Mm' or trq.f(ic
accidents noted

·'
tw

BECKLEY, W. Va. (UP!) -Raleigh
Coun ty Court members have voted . to
' 'te th
'
'
I i._
1nv1
e Umted Mm~ Workers to bring hs
headq~ar~r.s here, one of five West
Vlrgm1a Cities officially seeking such a
move.
New UMW President Arnold MOler
favors switching the union office from
Was!Ungton, D. C. to the coalflelda, but tlie
site Is not expected to be selected unUI next
year . Other cities seeking the
headquarters include Wheeling, Bluefield,
Fall'mont and Morgantown.

MEIGS THEATRE

10 'BIG DAYS .

Monday Dec. 25th thru Tues. Jan. 3rd

~ - - - ------ -- -- ---·-- ·
Sl''ill,\l

lI

.

I

1

I

ARB

&lt;•fttllo~t·\
,

lf';ll'.l~ Ql

i" H ~(IO' I~ I q).'/

'

I ••~\ .... ... , ..... ... ' """'" "' ' " I
Mild " )U I4 \(,.I I'I !O ~ I&lt; IIIU
I
'"" C•II •DOII l•, t,.np '" 0!11(1 ~ "~ Wnt I
I v'"J'" ' ~ ~II'' '"M 1 11 ~ I • moi''K1 ~ ~
I

!

1

GALLIPOLIS'
.
. - Two 'minor I '""'
......
""I ' ''"""''"
.......
t iJ ,,,
rno-&gt;11),
.~."M "'(1"'"1
uoo 1
trarfiC 3CCidCnts were in- I no Dft•l; 1'''' ~"'' ~qo m• sl ao 1•&gt;. 1I
vesti'gated Fri'day by ci' ty II "W11JPIY
m~~.~"',~~~'"'..~~IIN;t;':,'.~~t~·7~;;:~:~~.~~~.
,, •.
•o ll•f ulr loo II•'"I•CII•o ~ I
poii'ce ofll'c·ers The r·Irs t
II G' ~·· Ill ... " ''O~•rt•vl t• t!loltll ·~ ·~·~ 1I
'
~pUltl•'"&lt;'il ••• • '
I
curred on the parking lot at the '--- - -·-- - --- - -·----- ~
State Liquor Store on Third
Ave., where J,auren E. Hoffman, 53, Rt. I, Dexter, backed
his car from a (lllrking space
and slruck a. parked auto
owned by Murray E. Church,
Rt. 1 Crown City There ..
mino~damage toChurch's;as
Asecond mishap occurred~~ .
Vine St. at Johnson 's Market
parking lot where an auto
owned by Jimmie A. Evans,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was struck by
an unknown ·vehicle.
~

AFRANKOVICH""""'~'

l

Tlm:s-SEHI:-It:l.
:
r~""'"
: """"""' ..... '"""'' ,, ,,, 0 ,,. 1
Jl'fll:l,miJIJJdml~
11
1 "' ~;.... L~~~ci~·~t h~~~., .. y ,11 , 1111 N1
1
r\II .1:1
I2G
1 11\ ~~"o tw• '-' ~"· P~''\ OhrQ lH 'JI I
~~~~
·
11 :~.~~;~~~·: ~~:.~~.. ;~·~~,ft~~:~-:t~~..~~r~b {,"· ~ · .

()•,lt •• •~ft n.
,
1
trn ' '"''" Ht. l.tl•"- lh
I II ( u~rr 'I n.,.,n~· 4i 0 f!I &amp;Y I
I s~
f.'ui!II\U M ~""'• .. ,.,._ ,,~ "' "''n'rt~ ~ ·hpl I
rwrD•&gt; f "'' • ,,., "' I&lt; r,,.,H t r;o .. ,.,~!J ,.
,. , ... . ~~( .... ! " '''"• 111 Y O~·ri uo.ri'J•Jri1f! II tho

Beckly wants h ea. d quarters

.
GALLIPO,LIS - Danny 554, at the railroad tracks in lost control of his car on the heavy damage to his car.
Wilson, 18, Rt. 2, Pedro, was BidwelL
railroad tracks and turned
No charge was filed in a rear
charged
with
reckless
According to the Gallia· over. Y!ilson suffered minor end collision at 9:25 p.m. on
operation following a traffic Meigs Post State Highway injuries but was not im- Neighborhood Rd., three tenths
ac~ident Friday night on Rt. Patrol,
Wil son mediately treated. There was of a mile south of Rt. HI. Of·
fleers said an auto driven by
Harland B. Sanders, 17,
Ga llipolis, struck the rear end
of a car driven by Eleanor
Walte~s, 44, Gallipolis, causing
COLUMBUS (UPI )
industry and civic groups, the Representatives and managed
minor damage.
Reports fUed at Secretary of largest being $25,000 from tile to retain only a slight edge in
State Ted W. Brown's office by Education &amp; Executive CO., a tile Ohio Senate and a large · Three morning accidents
tile 4 p.m. Friday deadline for local insurance finn linked margin in tile congressional were investigated Friday. The
first occurred on Little Kyger
campaign expense reports closely witll the OEA.
delegations.
Rd., eight tenths of a niile from
showed 52 groups spent
Other large contributors inGOP Tops Spendlog
Rt.
7 where Roger Goff, 37, Rt.
$341,536 to successfully defeat cluded:
The Republican party I, Cheshire, lost control or his
efforts to repeal Ohio's new
Armco Steel, Middletown, reported spending ,1,703,292 on
income tax last montll.
$10,000; Dayton Chamber of the fall campaign, while car which struck a bridge
'I!le top spender on efforts to COmmerce, $6,200; Goodyear Democrats listed only $343,594 railing. There was heavy
damage to his car.
retain the tax was the Ohio Tire · &amp; Rubber Co., $5,1100; in expenditures.
Moderate damage resulted
Education Association, which Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber CO.,
No reports had been received
!lit $85,250 ln!o the effort $5,000; Citizens for a Better by the deadline from major from an accident at.B:Oli a.m.
spearheaded by the Ohioans Hamilton COunty Inc., $5,1100; coinrnittees backing President on Bob McCormick Rd., six
for Fair Taxation Committee. .and Greater Cleveland Growth Nixon or his Democralic chal- tenths of a mile south of RU60
where cars driven by Jennie
'I!le educational group was Association, $5,1100.
lenger ,
Sen.
George
Holz ~r. 22, Gallipolis, and
solidly behind keeping the tax,
The campaign to abolish tile McGovern.
Barbar~ Stroud, 33, Rt. 1,
since a big portion of the rev- state income tax and require a
"These reports may he in the
enue goes to support public vote by Ohioans on all futu re mall and won't be regarded as Gallipolis, collided on a curve.
schools which in recent years new taxes, listed Issue 2 on tile late if it is shown they were No charjles were filed.
Brian Saunders, 75, Patriot
have been on the verge of ballot, was headed by five mailed prior to 4 p.m. Friday,"
bankruptcy.
mave rick Republi can state Elections Counsel James ~tar Rl., was slightly in(ured in
an accident at !0:50a.m. on the
'I!le committee reported it legislators under the name of Marsh said.
Northup-Patriot Rd .
spent all of the $314,021 it te- the Citizens for Repeal of the
There is no penalty in Ohio
Officers said Saunders car
celved, Including S43,000 It Ohio Income Tax.
campaign laws against late fll.
struck.
a tractor traller which
bon owed from the OEA and
The Cltizem group reported ling by committees, tile indivithe Ohio Farm Boreau and it spent only $16;598 on, Its dualll who fail to comply can't was ln. tile roadway. The rig
wblcb 8IDce bas been repaid. unsucce'ssful efforts, including take office or run lor office !or was owned by F&amp;W Tractor
Sales. its Owner was charged
The OEA said Ill . . . did $5,682 in unpaid biDs. But its five years.
with parking on the roadway.
lllll Include tha ..... .... flve legislative supporters
Marsh said the deadline was
_,-, wblletllrhrlll iuneu were reelected at 'tile Nov. 7 met by 51 of the 58 congresIIIII It OOIIII1IJillld ....., In election.
sional candidates, including
lllr• ll!ltallmiDII, aot Jn.
Other reports flied at tbe aec- the 23 winners He said the Newark 63 Lancaster 35
.1-.
,
•
• L.lncaster FISher 82 Bloom
....... Ill ...... lllln.
. retary of lllte'l office lbowed ..,.en
missing reports may be
Carroll 70
tbe state Replbllcan party In the ChriatmaHiowed mall Pickerlcglon 61 Berne Union 58
C 1 hi::M,_
......... might __. Tuesd
Canal Winchester 79 Amanda
. , , . . . . . . . . . d.. l and ~pent nearly fiwJ tillleCI •
"''-.;u
lruve.
ay,
Clearcreek 76
much u did tile , DeuiOualic and ~ wonJd be considered Millersport SO Liberty Union 60
party lut IIIOIIIb, The GOP last u if 1IMt)&gt; Ctllllplled with the Utica 80 Notlhrldao 62
•--•"·Gran ville 11 Heath 62
from Clllltrol of the Oblo HoUle ol •·
Lakewood 79 Joi&gt;Miown 49

.,_,lin,
.......

and help to refer callers to .and federal government or!ices
individuals, agencies or and programs and other
organizations that might be organizations in tile broad
The Alcoholism 'and Drug helpful in meeting · their . social service fi\•ld a very
Abuse Committee wants to problem·s and needs.
complete county resource
make sure the public un·
For example, the Meigs Care directory has been compiled by
derstands that this is not just a Line, 992-7502, is the number to members of St. John ani! St.
number to call for alcohol or ' call for help in such areas as . Paul Lutheran Churches in
other drug emergencies and marital difficulties, personal Minersville and. Pomeroy and
information. The trained problems, loneliness and guy- this list has been made
volunteer staff will be equipped girl hassels . .The Meigs Care available _to the Care Line
to handle these calls but also Line can help refer to agencies volunteers.
will deal in other crisis in· or individuals to help with
For further information on
tervention problems such as home health needs in the the f\1eigs Care Line needed
suicide prevention, be a center nursing field, welfare and food before the January I opening
to call for information on a stamp information, family date please call the Meigs
wide range of service agencies planning services available in County Alcoholism ·and Drug
and organizatio~s in the county the county,local, county, state Abuse Program and director,
·. Rev. Arthur C. Lund at 992·2010
or at 992-3723 to leave a number
for a return calL
Rev. Stanlen Smith is the
president of the Alcoholism
and Drug Committee and is
cases of Falls City beer, five thieves heavily damaged a heading a fund raising drive to .
cases of Stroh's beer, wine and juke box and several vending help pay the county's portion of
the care line cos~. Ahy ina screwdriver mixture were machines.
taken ·from the Spor.tsman's
The sheriff's department di vidual or organization
Inn located on Rt. 233 in Gallla. Friday returned Marvin G. wishin~ to contribute may send
'fhe property' was valued at Miller, 26, Rt.l;Northup,lu the their contributions to the Meigs
$1,298.50.
Coun ty Jail to begin a 30 day County Alcoholism and Drug
In addition to the beer, the sentence lor escape. Miller had Abuse Program, 231 East
been convicted of assault with Second Street, Pomeroy.,
intent to rape in February,
1971. Following a l-15 year
sentence, he attempted to
escape from sheriff's deputies.
lerseclion of the business loop
Miller was tackled In the hall
on SR 7at Hobson near county outside the Gallia ·County
Tonight~ Moh., Tues.
· road 21, Barry s. Bryant, Common Pleas Courtroom by
Dec. 24·25-26
Rodney, was driving 8 dump Deputy Sheriff Phil Underwood
truck north when he went to and Assistant Prosecuting
THE REV~NGERS
sleep.
. Attorney Jim Bennett.
·
(Technlcolorl
'fhe truck went off the road
Arrested Friday were Dennis
Susan Hayword
William Holden
and struck and ripped down a Dean Bush, 26; Galllpolis
Colorcartoons
stop sign, two guard rail posts Ferry, for DWI and Billy Joe
(PG)
and 36 feel of guardraiL The Oxyer, 20, Rt. I, Cheshire.
Show Starts 7 p.m.
driver was not Injured. There
was light damage to the truck.
No citation was Issued .
At 1a.m. Saturday on SR 124,
one and six tenths mile west of
Route 325, • Roy Robert
Vaughan, 20, Rt. 1, Langsville,
traveling west struck lind
killed an eight point buck deer
1
that ran into the path of his car.
There was damage to the front
of the ca,r, but no personal
injuries.

6 autos damaged

Man injured

•.

.

GALLIPOLIS
About
everything needed lor a wild
party apparently was obtained
in a breaking and entering
investigated Friday by the
Gallia County sheriff's
depariment.
Deputies said six cases of
Pabst Blue RibbOn beer, 10

ANOTIIER DONATION - Bill Mitchell, chairman .of the Gallia COunty
Volunteer Em~rgency Squad co!)llllittee, right, accepts $226 collected by "!embers
of the Mountameers 4-H Club of tile Patriot area. Club members presenting the
mon_ey were left to right, Maryann11 Crouse, advisor; Curt Elliott, vice-president;
Lymta Newberry, who collected the most money,' $72; Drema Waugh, member ;
Bonita Waugh, secretary; Ricky Crouse, treasurer; Joe O'Dell, president. Mrs.
Crouse had challenged other 4-H clubs to conduct a similar project.

Ohio's income tax law

.,

tifying information unless they
so desire.

21 Cases of beer stolen

·y oung Gallia driver charged

1:00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Irs Your Bets; Green
Acres 10; Watch Your Child 15.
1:30-3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As The
World Turns 8, 10. ·
·
2:00 - ·Daya of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game13; Mike
DouGlass 6; GuldlnA Light S, 10.
.,
2:30- 'Doctors 3, 4, 15; Oatlng ,Game 13; Edge of Nlghtl, 10.
3:00- General Hospltal6, 13; Another World 3, 4, 15; Love Is
Splendored Thing a, 10; Just Generation 20.
3:il0 - Return to Peykln Place 3, 4, 15; Secret Storm a. 10; One
Life fo llye ,6, 13.
4:00- Mr. Cartoori 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. 33; Love,
American Style 13; Marv Griffin 4; Fllntstones 6; Gilligan's
Isle Casanova Brown 10.
4: 25 Club 6.
Petticoat Junction 3; Daniel Bciono 13;
GriHith 15.
Rogera33, 20; Ponder- 3, 4; Daniel
Mlill 15.
.
Elec:. Co. 33; Dragnet 8; Gomer Pyle
20.
'
- ~=20; Around The hnd 33. .
I I
ol .INnnle 13; o.-tng
,l'veGotAStcrel13; Film IJ; Elacfrlc

POMEROY - The Meigs
Counly Alcoholism and Drug
Abu~ Prognim is setting up
tlie final arrangements for a
Meigs County Care Line.
T~e Care tlne wlll bec.ome
an operation.on .lanuary 1, and
be staffed '· by trained volunteers' between the hours or 4
p.m. and 4 a,m. seven days per
week.
The number to call has been
designated as 992-7502. All calls
made to the Meigs Care Line
will be kept strictly confidential and the caller 'need
notgiye his or her name, phone
number or any other iden-

~P""IPI~N

Qnd

11 110

•• •

l(l(dl

.
II

GOlDit
'

~
•

'.

6I""'.HEJaMT

·oor •

~01
Gio;mocM..
d

,

II

frll'!l

COlUM8VIPICTuRES IPOJ

~•••

And now a word
about loans from

Shaker .Heights 67 Garlleld
Heights 62
Midpark 39 Mayf i el~ 26

our Family Banking
Center:

Brecksville 67 Independen ce 54
Kenslon West Geouga 53

sa

Kirtland 61 Beachwood 42
Elyria Catholic 76 Lake
Catholic 47
.
Elyria 48 Marion Harding 45
Strongsville 58 Columbia A6
North Olmsted 70 Westlake 56
Bedf or~ 76 Men lor &lt;9
·
Maple Heights 108 Eas11ake
North sa
.
Ot-ange 62 Solon 57
Ashtabula 71 Jeflerson 58
Mldvlew 65 Amherst 61
Steubenville Central 64 Mar·
tlno Ferry 47

~i]•'

~

YES.

'

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money Back

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

·A&amp;P
Egg Nog
qt

69~
"109 fEARS Of S£RVIC£"

�r

3-The Swulay Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 24, 1972

North hit .

'1-'l'toi ...... TIIIa·......._bda.Y. Dec.M.Im

Ch

Had&amp;'

doJt a tkcr11

oKI from
ca-r Augtllhll that tHnl
all tile 1DOrld
tiiDt&amp;ld be e1lf'OIIri .•• Aftd all wenf
to be ellrollcd, each to hfl OVIII cUv. And
IOUph. Cillo Wilt 11p /TOIII Galilee; from
tile dt1l of NIIZilreth, to Judea, !Q the
cUll of Dcwid, which II called Btthlt·
lleil&amp;, btcallae lie 1001 of tile horue and
lftiHQe of Datrid, to be enrolled with
lfllt'l/, 1111 b t t r 'o t he d, who 10a1 with
child. A!ld while tile!/ were tlure, the
hiM camc for ller to be delivered. And
•lie 1/Gk birth to her first-bona Jon a!ld
~~m~pJ~td him in IID&lt;Jddlill(l c!othl, and
laid llim' in a 1114nger, becarue there
""" no place for tllem in the inn.

'" tllolc

Luke 2:1·1
By D~VID POIJ ~G .
The thoughts and memor1es of Christ·
mu may be the ·most powerful force that
we can uper:ience. For Christians, It ls a
blend (I(Jospel accounts describlnf the
CCIQIU.,
Chrllt. And fqt the lndlv1dual,
lt draws together the joys and comfort of
chlldboocl, lamlly, and home. And ln a
hec:tle, ever'Changlng culture, this counts
for much .
J
In her cluslc, "Death COmes for the
Arcbblahop," WIDa C&amp;tber vividly describe• the mlui01181'y efforta of Bishop
·Jean Lamy lo the grea~ SOuthwest a cen·
, t,.-y aao. In tbls vaat, bUsh, rugged land
of mouufaln and desert, a dedlcated
ChriltlaD broulbt III!W vlta!Jty to an ancleDt l'tllon of North America. It was a
toUIII, 'Ciem•ndlng vocation. Living on the
edge of the wilderness In Santa Fe, Miss
•C&amp;ther describes the season which we now
celebrate:
"It wu late afternoon of Christmas Day,
and the BllbOp sat at his desk writing
letters. SIDce liis return to Santa Fe his
offtclal correspondence· bad been .heavy ;
but the ciDRiy '!Pl'ltten sheets over which
be bent with a thoughtful smile were not
to go to Mol!llgnorl, or to Archbishops, or
to the beads of· religious houses-but to
.

Time To Give A Little

Americans Don't
Want 'Revolution'
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
(First ol Four Articles.)
WASIDNGTON (NEAl
1
Some of America's lotellectuals are in a departure
from hlstor!W pattern, taking a great Interest right now
in tbelr own country. Tbe reason: They thlok the "res!
molutloD" Is happening here.
TlleJ look about them aild see nearly all four of our rna·
lor IDitltut10111 under heavy attack-the political system
bns!na, education, religion, the famUy and its :ways.
. TlleJ 1rgue, of courae, that this Is good, and they ftnd
It occurriDa nowhere else on earth with comparable force
and lpeed. 1
At least a few of the approvln• intellectuals believe
the -lilt won'~:f. unW Ame~n · .llmlt11tlons have
bee11 radically aJ
1 lo ~ Cll81 UOq 1lmJ.it \files.
No one ean queatlon that the attac:k hu been goln&amp; on
or that It alreaciJ bu produced some ~Jmfl~pt .~h"IJ!'·
Nor ean anyone fairly contend there should be no
clwip since chance is a Jaw of life.
, It II quite pollible to disagree, however, wlth the notion tbat the eountry'a lostltutlons are In fot a truly radi·
cal mabover. Admittedly, the pace of change Is faster
thlll It used to be, but thit's true of almost eve~hlog
thele days. Most probably, the net consequence Will not

T-ty-third PrNident BenJamin Horrioon
(Adminlotrotlon: March 4, 1889-Morch 3, 1893)

'Now I walk with God'
I

Fi\·e nf the first six r•st-Ci,·il War Presidents
· were llom in Ohio ant scn·cd as Unicm :\rmy
officers.during the war. Fourth in this line of sucCCllsinn was !knjamin Harrison, .who had the
~'Sid&lt;:ll(:y and military qualifications but linlc else
to ru:ummcnd him for the P~-sidcncy .
One ljndistinguisht-d term as a U.S. scnatur had
lll.'ell Harri!CCilt's only prio'r pnlitic;tl post.
But destiny found the presidential cupboard
allllllllt \."lllpty at ·the Republican cnn\'ention at
ChiCIIJ'l! in Ul88. James G. Blaine ,\·a.~ the must
popul1r and most influential Repuhlkan, but he
"-. unweD and ,·acationing in St1llland. When a
dellllllck~·elnpcd hem'c:enjohn Sherman nfOhin
Walter Q, Gmham of lndi•na, pcarty lt'8dcrs

w·

..... Blliae fur ad\'it'\:.
.
'!lfte Harri11111,~ Blaine c3l:.led.
'flw com·eution wok Harrison, and Rt-puhlican

..,.n toOkfmhimtul of

on tu the Presidenc:y. lndusPresident CJe,'cland's low-

-I!Wllt,

•

By Ilelen and Sue Qotte1
RAP:
.
. ·Duke II a sweet guy with a million frlelida. He say1 be IOvl!ll
me, but aameliwei I IIlii* he'• jult eDI'dalng his llqa. No,
lllat's not true, be DOl!'.'! love me bat ...
He's got no Idea of time. SllowiDg up an hour and a half late
for' dates LI•Jmoet "early" fill' him. OfteD h6 ~'t lbow at all.
Geta illvolved with other people and forgets he told me be'il be
over. No wonder he dol!lln't keep appointments. He's probably
told ten other &amp;lends he'd meet THEM .too. He's just plain

-~· I try to make a joke of his "UmeleaslieBB," (it isn't juat wlth
.

,me, bill With everyone), and once ltoldblmplaln out bow I ate
Wa!Ung and that I bad to know where I,stood. He just hugged me
·and laid I worry too much -and I feU in low with him all over '
again.

be drastic enough to win the Intellectuals' final applause.
For one thing, a lot of the attack comes from tiny
bands of dissenters who contrive, by volume of noise and
o.b~r attention-getting tactics, to make their efforts seem
larger and more significant than they are.
For another, to the extent larger numbers of Ameri. cans are Involved, the evidence suggests that the assault
J:. not bent toward purposeful revolution but is instead
an uerclae In frustration, a kind of wild flailing away at
Institutions which seem l!lfreeponsive to popular needs.
The lnti!llectual may ~sk: What's the difference so long
as people's energies are being expended in attacks which
may bring down these structures?
'
The dlfference Is huge. Nothing Illustrates the fact
better than the 1972 election. The sweeping verdict for
Richard Nixon wu a de~lsion among other things against
radlcal change. As one reporter has JlOinted out, this same
characteristic of caution was exhibited in the small spe·
clfics of the vote In California on various propositions.
The far-out proposals went down.
The thing to say, then, is not that there is no attack
upon American Institutions, but that inteUectuals who
read It as "revolution" are grossly misreading it.
Indeed, a better case could be made out that the United
States was closer to revolutionary change in the Great
when a third of the work force was unem' Depression,
ployed. That, for sure, was a time of breaking bonds and
lnsUtuUonal overhaul. Yet, lt has to be remembered that
. in six years the steam was out of the New Deal. Franklin
D. Roosevelt turned his mind to the war and it was World
War II, not sweeping social change, which cured the
country's lingering 10 million unemployed.
No, Americans today are not questing after revolution. But they are In a unique situation, which makes life
In 1972 tantali~lngly troublesome even as it avoids the
dark depths of 1932.

''Better late than ~·· I guess,

Lut Friday l got really burned after spending all eveliing
drn ~up for nothing when be SAID we'd go to a.show. So 1
made plans to go out of town with friends this weekend. 1 juat
won't be there when be calls.
~1?-M.B.

DearM.:
· You certainly should! 'I!le guy may care for you - and a lot
ol other people - but he needs some dlsclpllne In his Ufe. He's
getting away wlth murder by expecting everyope to ~YSlt around
f!n'blm, juat ~cauae he'sa ''nlceguyW!thlotsoHrlends." ,
Nezt date be n;18kes, leave wl\hout him if I.e doein't shaw on
time. And leave a message on the door : 1'Toomsnywalts, breaks

dates." --SUE.
DearM.:
· "Better late than never"? SO long as you let your boy friend

go this route you'll never know where you stand. And who needs
the Walt Watcher award of the year?
TeD him "Betterneverthanalwayslate!" And mean ltl H be
Is hopelessly undependable, you'd better know it now than later.
-Helen.

TeleViiion Log
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24

. Dear Rap :
I got an Invitation to a birthday party, and lnstesd of
"R.,S.V.P." It bad on the bottom, "B.Y.O.B." COuldn't go, as I
had other plans, but what does "B.Y.O.B." mean? -N.W.I. (Not
With It, Maybe?)
Dear N.W.I. :
B.Y.O.B. means "Bring your own booze."-Helen and Sue.

6:UO-FIIm 4.
6: Jo-This Week 4; Newsmaker '72 13; Bob Harrl'l!llon 6; Voice
In the Bello.
.
7:00-Communlque 6; Old Time Gospel Hoor 13; Blaotoff 10;
This Is the Answer 3; Time for Timothy 4.
7:30-Falth for Today 8; Revival Flreo 6; Herald of Truth 3; Dear Rap:
I
Lamp Unto My Feet 10.
Our llllllher dled 19 years ago. Our Dad just recently started
8:00-Leonard Repaos 8; Gospel .Caravan 6; Church Service 13;
Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4; Billy James Hargis and gobig out with Cindy who Is a great person.
His All-American Kids 10.
·
All was goU., ..,II until she ended It a couple of weeks ago.
8:3o-Oral Roberts 3; You! Health 4; Day of Dlacovery 8; Rex
Humbard 13; Revival Fires 13r Kathryn Kuhlam 6; Camera We really like her and tbe two of them got along g~t. Ia there
Three 10.
any way we can get them hac:k together again? They're still
, 9:00-Singlng Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel4; Rex Humbard 15; Oral frlmds. - Two Cellcerned Teenage Daughters
Roberto 10; Archie's TV Funnies 8,
·
· 9:30-Church by Side of Road 4; Good News 13; Cartoons 10; Dear TCI'D:
Rex Humbard 8.
Tbls ~ hu got to be totally up to your father and ,
10:00-Church Service 4; Faith for Today 15; Curiosity Shop 6,
andy. Let him lmow you like her a lot, but otbenrlae stay clear.
13; This Is the Life 3; Tidings of Great Jor,, 10.
10: 30-This Is the Life 15; Insight 4; Capta n Noah 3; Old Time '-&amp;it.
Gospel Hour 8.
11:00-TV Chapell; Consumer Report 15; Focus on Columbus 4; Dear Two:
I don't euetly agree with Sue: If you want aamelhm, to·
Brother Buzz 6; Bullwlnkle 13; Cartoons 10.
11 :3()-Make A Wloh 6, 13; CMreach 15; Sports Challenge 3; uppea, )'llU 111111t help It along. Get these two together wttb
CPBA Bowling 6; Pro Footbl!ll Pre-Game Show 8, 10. •
· lllrafllile pl•mdog . For lltarten: cont1n1111 your frUindshlp with
1 ~: 00-Calvln Evans 13; At Issue 3; sacred Heart )5; NFC
Playoff 8, 10. .
andy. Wbal ;vou find out wily abe IX'Oke olf, yoo'll know better
12:3()-Revlval Fires 13; Meellha Preu3, 4, 15.
·
'11.'),
&gt;IU&lt;l•i,ll&gt;J' ~~n)J~"'l"-·
"~- &gt;I .....
1:00-Lower Llghlhoose 13; 'NFL Ginie of the w..k 31 Dlrec· .bow to Jloceed.
Good
Lacll:J-HoJen
I
J'J'
•I
•0&lt;'11
1
lions 6; Church by the Side of ihe Road 4; Fa ill! for Today 15.
1: 30-Movle, "The Snow Quun" 3; Film 4; Blue Rl• Quartet
.. 13; TBA 15.. .

,

, ,.

•

· r ..,.

2:00-Polhl of View 6; Man From UNCLE 4; Point of View 6;
_ .SI~x T.~"'- 13: Roller Derby 15.
·
·
2:3o-Jake's "Place o, tJ.
3:00-NFC Playoff 3, ~ . 15; Mister Rodgers 6; TBA 8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
.
.
3&gt;30-Untamed World 6; Rookies 13; MOvie, "The Bells of St. .
Mary'o" 10.
.
·
4:00-Wacky World of Jonathan Winters 6; VIrginian 8;
Chrlstmao Around the World" 33.
4:3()-World ot Survlal 13; Bach Festival 20, 33.
5:00-Ripples 33; Doddletown Piper&amp; 6; Movie "The Miracle'.'
13.
5: 30-Shenandoah College Choir 8.
6:00-Green Acres 3; News4; Pope Paul Vl'o Midnlght Mass6;
60 Minutes 8, 10; NFL Repo•t 15.
6: Jo-News 3, 4, 15.
tariff siand and pressed relentlessly hy Republican
7:GO-'-La.wrence Welk 13; safari to Adventure 3; This Is Your
campaign managers, made unprectxlcntcd contrihu·
Llfe4 ; Wild Kingdom 15; Walt Till Your Father Gets Home 6;
UFOS ; lntheKnow10;Zoom20,33.
·
· tions w Republican coffc;rs.
7:
3()-Juot
Generation
33
(
1.at'•
Make
a
Deal
6;
Annal&amp; The
Even so, Cleveland nutpollcd I Iarrison by more
King 10; World of Disney 3, 15; Movie "A Chrlotmu Carol"
20 .. _
' ''
than 100,000 votes, alth·&gt;ugh Harrison \1 JS an easy
8:
()C}-FI\1
6&lt; 13.LM,sh 8, 10; Caroling, Caroling 33,
winner in the electoral coiiL'gC, 233 to 168, when
8:30-French Chef 20, 33; Sandy Duncan 8, 10; Mcl.&gt;oo~ J, •· 15;
_ Fac&lt;!,of ChJistma• 33. ....... .
he got the pivotal votes nf New York.
9:00-Masterplece Theatre 20, 33; Dick Van Dyke 1, 10; MOVIe,
The rigidly pious Harrison was so overcome
"Those Darl1 Young Men In Their Jaunty Jalopies" 6, 13.
election hight by his political resurrection tha t he
9:3o-Mannlx 8, 0.
. ·
.
10:00-Firlng
Line
20;
Nl~t
Gallery
3,
~ . 15.
declaml "Now · I walk with GcH.I. Providence has
10: 3o-Protectors 41 Evil ouch 8; High Road to Adventure 10;
given us the victory ."
Pollee Surgeon 15; We Ink You Should Know 3.'
11
:00-News.
Weather, $port] 3 4. i.1o, 15 . .
. In a long, rambling inaugural address rcminis'11: 15-Rose Bowl Bound 4; Chr1stm•s Olrois 8, 10. .
'cent of his grandfather's inaugural speech 48 years
11 :3()-Movle, "Nobody's Perfect" 3; ABC News 6, 13; A
Christmas Concert 4; Christmas Music 15; Leitha Desert Be
before, Harrison advocated a high protective tariff,
Joyful 8, 10.
stricter immigration laws, warned that a treasury
12:00-Midnlght Maos 4, 15; Cal)dlellght Service 8, 10; Messiah
13.
' '
surplus was a "serious c~il" that should be appl ied
1:00-Movle, "Three Coi~s In the Fountain" 13.
to the rL-demption of the! public debt-Harrison
3:00-News 13.
inherited a debt of $1,664,461 ,536.22 which hi s
MONDAY, DEC. 25, lf72
6:00Sunrise
Seminar
4.
:\dministration reduced slightly-and aggrt'Ss ively
6:15- Farm Report 13. · .
6:20 - Paul Harvey 13.
rest ted the Monroe Doctrine as :\merids foreign
6:30
- Coiumbuo Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Children's Special
policy.
13.
'
6:45 - CorncOb Report 3. .
The two major measures passed in Harrison's
7: 00 - Today 3, 4, 15; lo(ews, Weather, Sports 6; CBS News 8, 10;
:\dministration were the Sherman Silver Purchase
Fllntstones 13.
7:25- Sports 13. '
:\ct, which caustxl a gold drain, which in turn led
7:30- Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jaffer$ 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
to the Panic of 1893 , and the McKinley Tariff Act,
13.
which practically climinatL~I foreign cumpetitinn
8:00 - Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
· Lassie 6.
with the highest tariffs in the nation's history, caus.8:30- Jack Lal.anne 13; Romper RoomS; New Zoo Review 6;
· Paul Dixon ~ .
·
ing a general upward spiral in prices for consumers.
8:55
Local
News
13.
Secretary of State Blaine meanwhil e carried out
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Cal'f. Ka"ll'lroo 8;
a· vigorous and forward-looking foreign policy. The
Concentration 6; Friendly Junction 10; Pope Paul ·VI'•
Midnight
Mass13; Mister Rogers33; Green Acres3. ·
fir~'t Pan-American Conference met in Wash ington,
9:30- To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy6; Hazell; Eltc:trlc Co. 33.
and a treaty for the annexation nf Hawaii-whose
10:00 - Joker's Wild 8, 10; Christmas ,Day Service 3, 4. 15;
Messiah 6 ; A Christmas Carol 33.
Queen !-iliuokalani had been removt~l from her
10:30 - Price Is Rights, 10; Concentration 3, 15; Split Second 13;
throne by a group of Americans- was one of the
NaVy Christmas 6.
11
:00
- sate otthe Century 3, 15; Gambill, 10; Elec. Co. 20: San
last measures President Harrison sent to the Seninc
Antonio Chrlslmas Service 6, 13; Phil Donahue 4.
before he was rL-plat'\:d in the Presidency by the
11:30 :- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame
St. ~OJ 33.
.
, 11:00
man he had replaced.
- eopardy 3, 15; Pauword 6; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4;
:\ direct dt'SCcndant &lt;,If a distinguished lineage
Contact 8; News 10; Messiah 13.
12: 25 - CBS News 8.
going back tel 17th-century Virginia cnlonial days,
12: 30 - Spii1Stcond6; SearchfotTomori'OWa, 10; News3; 3 W's·
Harrison paid scant attention to his ancestry, pre3, 15; Houle Consort 33.
1:00All My Chlld...... 6, 13; New-.WMther, Sporl$3; Jacklt
ferring the path of rcligicms dei'Otion taught him
Oblinger 8; Green Acrn tO; Watch Yoor Child 15.
by his mother, Elizabeth Irwin Harrison . "I pray
1:30- 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Mike A 0..16, 13; As The
World Turns 1, 10.
for you daily,." she wrote to him while he was in
2: 00 - Days o1 Our Ll- 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
c:nllcgc, "that you may he kept frum sinn ing ;md
Douglas 6; Guiding Light 1, 10; Plot to Overthrow Chrtslmal
33.
'
.
straying from the paths of dUty. "
2:30 Docton 3, 4. 15; l!dgl flf Nlghl I. 10;
Many questioned Benjamin Harrison's mnccpt
The
Another Wtrtd I. 4. Ill Low II A
of duty, but no one t~luld reasonably question his
10.
ck-dication to it. ""r was there C\'er the slightest
i.. 4. 151 NBA lll*tlllell6. 131
whisper against the moral hcha\'inr uf the man who
taught a men's Sunday sch•••l class in Indianapolis'
for .. 0 yean , who led his regiment in prayer during
the war, who conducted a daily prayer session in
the White House and who was the nation's only
6:
Presbyterian President clcctt-d by the Republicans
6:
until Owighr Eisenhower hccamc the sccnnd one
in 195.1 .
7:

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

•
•

Generation Rap

France, to Auvercne. to 1111 own little
town; to a certalD &amp;reY, windlog ~t.
peved with cobbles IIIII •haded by ~I
cbestnuts ·..."
For Bishop Lamy1 and for IDIDY of us,
Christmas calls us oome. And If we can.
not ~ch that place wbere life had its
start, that fireside with young parents and
favorite first-friends, we mate a nosJ;allgic
· journey that ls not without Its joys. There
are some abroad who are ever puttlilg
down our pollshlog of · memories, our
treasuring ol the pest. Words like "senti·
mental,'' "memory/ ' and uchUdhood..
seem absent from vocabulary, unless U5ed
in a .derl$1ve manner. Fortunately for all.
of us\ 1the memories of Christmas pall!
race m with power and perspaslon and
colilfort..
·
Christmas reminds us that the CllrQtiiui ·
experience had a begiMing at a deflllite
lime and place. The source '1f8S a f~, ·
the condition, childbirth, the surr1mnding~
-withlo a home. Here God cllose to &lt;reveal Himself in Jesus Christ IIIII tel ex.
press that revelation in Jove. So witll our
own families. Here we first expede~~Cecl
love and caring, respect and forSiveDess,
hopes and dreams. This season elills us to
research these belinnlngs and renew these
vislDI!I of what life can be.
When Albert Schweitzer was suffering a
severe nervous depression, some say a
men~ breakdown after World War I, his
pbysjclan in Swl~erland urged him to
reach back into childhood, to recall ,the
happy days of hts youth, to remember his ·
loving parents and home-for ' here he
would find, again, the strength and support to overcome his present dlfllcul!ies.
And he dld, eventually Jubllshing,
"Memories of · Childhood a
Youth"
•
bringing happiness to thousands of readers
around the world and bringing new life
to himself. Christmas baa that power. And
it brings joy to the whole world.
Merry Christmas!

IIUCE BIOSSAT

(Continued from page 1)
he . inspected bomb damage at Haiphong
Friday.
·
ANorth Vietnamese spokesman ·in Paris
said tile deatll report was made up ,by the
U.S. Cen~ral Intelligence Age~y as a
psycholog~cal warfare ploy. "It is an out·
and-out invention . of the CIA ," · the
spokesman said. The U.S. command In
Saigon hild "no comment" 'ID the report.
'I!le U.S. 'COmmand acknowledged that
two more B52 Stratofortresses the ninth
and lOth this week, were shot do~ Friday.
Radio Hanoi, however, claimed North
Vietnamese gunners shot down two more
Saturday, bringing to 17 the nwnber of
B52s tile North Vietnamese bave claimed
•downed .since bombing resumed north of
the 20th parallel Monday.
· The B52 downings left · at least ·55
American airmen missing in action since
Monday night -the heaviest such toll of
the war. Radio llano! bas listed the names
of 15 U.S. a innen it says have been captured in the bombing assault. ·
A U.S. command spokesman said Air
Force, Navy and Marine pilots had more
than 100 Soviet built SAM2missiles fired at
them on each of the first four days of the
bombing offensive. From April 6, when
President Nixon ordered the renewed
bombing of North Vietnam, until tile start
of tile stepped-up air war Monday, only
2,800 SI\M2 missiles had been fired at
American planes.
Military sources believed the North
VietnameSe received large shipments o.f
replacement SAMs after President Nixon
limited bombing to points south of the 20th
parallel of north latitude Oct. 23 in a good.
· will gesture.
, ·
In the ground war, for the first time
siBce the siege of Kontum City was lifted
June 14, North Vietnamese troops began
massing Saturday south of Fire Base
November, within four miles north of the
city.
In three small battles within a mile of
the base during the day, a total of 42
COmmunists were killed. Three South
Vietnamese died and 18 were wounded,
military spokesmen told UP! reporter
Matt Franjol~ at Pleiku.
·
La~ Saturday the base began receiving
heavy shell fire and esrly In the evening
.communications with the base were lost
an;j a tactical emergenCy declared. AU.S.
Air Force AC130 Spectre gunship was sent
to the seen~. Rac!io contact was reestablished witllin about two hours with an
Am.erlcan ildviser in a tank, who said other
· antermas had been shot away.
'Military spokesmen told Franjola the
situation was ''very confused" and it was
not known whether COmmunists were in or
around the base perimeter.
In Saigon, SOutll Vietnam's Foreign
Ministry armounced goverrunent troops
wiJI observe a 24-hour Olristmas holiday
truce, beginning at ·a p.m. Sunday.
Thursday night the Viet COng's clandestine Uberatlon 'Radio armounced the
COmmunists· would observe a 24-bour
cease.fire beginning at 1 p.m. Sunday.
The U.S. command, declining to
"iliscuss future 9J1erational matters," said
it had notlling to say about a Christmas
holiday truce. However, a command
spokesman said that "very little time
would be needed to Implement a Christmas ceaseflre.
UP! correspondent Helen Thomas,
reporting from Key Biscayne, Fla., where
President Nixon Is spending the holiday,
said she had learned that U.S. bombing of
North Vietnam would be halted in line witll
the arrangements made by the Soutll
Vietnamese.

by Patterson· and Patrick

'

.

Care Line hegins January' 1st

.

Clock 4; Soonds of Joy 33.
•
7:30 - To Tell The Truth 6; EpisOde Action 33; Yoong Dr.
Kildare 8; Hollywood Squares 4; capital Unlveril!'f Cholr 10;
Movie "The Little Fugitive" 13; Caroling, Caroling 20.
8:00- UFO 6; Tho American Experience 3; Opening Night:
USAB, 1~; Sleeping Beauty20, 33; Laugh In 15.
9:00- Here's Lucy 8, 10; Movie "The Railway Chlldr"!'" 3, 4,
15; Nortfi.Sooth Shrine Game 6, 13.
9:30 - Doris Day 8. 10; Book Beat 20; International Per·
formanca 33.
10:00- Bill Cosby 8, 10; Newo 20.
II:OO~Nows3,4,6,8, 10, 15.
11:30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Movie "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" 8;
"Moulin Rouge" 10.
· II: 45- Johnny Carson 4.
12:00- News 6, 13.
12:30- Movie "Lad: A Dog" 13.
1:00- Focus on Columbus 4.
1:30- News 4.
2:30 - News 13.
TUESDAY, DEC. 26, 1972
-6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; sacred Heart 10.
· 6:15- Farm Report 13; Farmtlme 10.
6:20- Paul Harvey 13.
6:25 "" Faith For Today 13,
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Concern &amp; Com.
ment-10; Faith For Today 13. .
'
6: 45 - CorncOb Report 3.
7:00- Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; News 6; Fllntstones 13.
7:30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Bullwlnkle a. Rocky ··
13.
8:00- Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Timmy a. Laosle 6. .
8:30- Jack La l.anne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Revue 6.
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Concentration 6;
Friendly Junction 10; Ben casey 13; Captain Kangaroo· 8; :
G,...n Acres 3; Mister Rogero 33.
,
9:30- To Tell The Truth 3; Joopardy6; Hazell; Electric Co. 33.
10:00- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Dick Van Dyke 13; Joker's Wild 8, TO;
Columbus Six Calling 6.
10:30- Concentration 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; Split Second 13;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
11:00 - sate Of The Cantury 3, 15: Love American Style .6;
Gambit 8, 10; Password 13; Electric Co. 20.
11:30- Hollywood Squares3, 4, 15; Love Of Life 8, 10; Bewitched
6, 13; Sesame Street 2Q.
•
12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; BOb Braun'o 50·50 Club 4; Password 6;
Jackie Oblinger I; News 10, 13.
·
12: 25 - CBS News 8.
12: ~:-3 W'oGame3, 15; Split Second6; Sear.ch lor Tomorrow a,

'

4 Bidwell ladies

win commendation
GALLIPOLIS - Members of the Gallia
County Volunteer Emergency Squad last
week expressed their "sincere ap·
preciation" to four ladies in the Bidwell
community, · Mrs. Norce Knotts, Mrs.
Ethel Dewitt, Mrs. Joanne Bass, and Mrs.
Yvonne Jacobs.
These lour ladies made a door-to-door
canvass in the Bidwell community the past
week collecting $351 lor the local
emergency squad. The donation will be
used to help pay for the new emergency
ambulance expected to arrive in Gallipolis
this week.
The local Squadmen also thank everyone
who has donated thus far.

Ruff appointed to
board of elections
..
~

'

•" }.(j

!'

'
Ml"~

GALLIPOLIS - Frank Ruff).Centerwille
merchant, and chairman of the · Ghllia
County Democratic Executive Committee,
has been named to the Gallia County.
Board of Elections. Ruff succeeds the late
Joseph Straight. .
Ruff, wl)o operates a grocery store in
Centerville, has been active in Democrat
politics many years. He also serves on lhe
Democratic central committee for C~ n­
terville Pet.
Last week the Republican Executive
Committee named Rupert Trout of
Gallipolis to fill the unexpired term of the
late Lawrence Green of Evergreen. Other
members of the Gallia County Board of
Elections are F. Dale Allensworth of
Cheshire, a Republican and Charles Bane
of Lower River Rd., a Democrat.

W

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. was
busy Friday . night investigating · traffic accide n l~
tha t involved six vehicles and a
big buck deer.
At -9:46 p.m. on private
property, Southern Local High
School parking lot, four cars
got entangled. Karolina
Thoma, Racine, Rt. 2, was
stopped in line of traffic
following the Eastern-Southern
basketball game when her car
was struck in the rear by one
driven by Vi cki .L. Car r,
Coolville, Rt. 2. Behind the
Carr vehicle was a third driven
by Claude D. Nease, Minersville, who got stopped, but
backed up and hit a car stopped
behind him driven by Richard
S. Stettler, Chester.
There was minor damage to
all the cars except Stettler's
which had heavy damage'.
There were no injuries and no
citations issued.
• p.m . at tbe J n- ,
At• 11:25
1
.. ,

(Continued from page i)
the south bcu~d la~e .
Wamsley • his wife, Charolette, and
Broderick were taken by the Pomeroy ER
squad to Veterans Memorial flospital,
tllentransferredtoHolzerMedi~alCenter .

Mrs. Wamsley suffered lacerations to her
scalp and face and was treated and
released. Wam:'leyhada broken jaw alid a
severe lacerallon of his chin, and all his
Ieeth were knocked out. Broderick later
was trans!erred to Huntington Hospital.
Also called to the scene was
Prosecuting Attorney Bernard Fultz. The
Sheriff's Dept. said the accident is still
under investigation.
·

ONU executive is dead .·
CAPE CORAL, Fla. (UPI) - Dr.
Warner G. Peterson, a former business
manager and treasurer at Ohio Northern
University, died at his ho.me here Frldsy
mght after a six-month illness. Private
services are to be held, ·Tuesday at Ft.'
Myers, Fla.
'
Peterson retired as executive vice
Pres1'den ! an d ! reasurer a t Beth any
~ ~Colte&amp;e'- W~i-. e .'he also Was tennis coaCh,
e
' his teams
d be een
. postin.'g a 13"7
~ recor
1952 and 1970. They won eight team
championships.

Mm' or trq.f(ic
accidents noted

·'
tw

BECKLEY, W. Va. (UP!) -Raleigh
Coun ty Court members have voted . to
' 'te th
'
'
I i._
1nv1
e Umted Mm~ Workers to bring hs
headq~ar~r.s here, one of five West
Vlrgm1a Cities officially seeking such a
move.
New UMW President Arnold MOler
favors switching the union office from
Was!Ungton, D. C. to the coalflelda, but tlie
site Is not expected to be selected unUI next
year . Other cities seeking the
headquarters include Wheeling, Bluefield,
Fall'mont and Morgantown.

MEIGS THEATRE

10 'BIG DAYS .

Monday Dec. 25th thru Tues. Jan. 3rd

~ - - - ------ -- -- ---·-- ·
Sl''ill,\l

lI

.

I

1

I

ARB

&lt;•fttllo~t·\
,

lf';ll'.l~ Ql

i" H ~(IO' I~ I q).'/

'

I ••~\ .... ... , ..... ... ' """'" "' ' " I
Mild " )U I4 \(,.I I'I !O ~ I&lt; IIIU
I
'"" C•II •DOII l•, t,.np '" 0!11(1 ~ "~ Wnt I
I v'"J'" ' ~ ~II'' '"M 1 11 ~ I • moi''K1 ~ ~
I

!

1

GALLIPOLIS'
.
. - Two 'minor I '""'
......
""I ' ''"""''"
.......
t iJ ,,,
rno-&gt;11),
.~."M "'(1"'"1
uoo 1
trarfiC 3CCidCnts were in- I no Dft•l; 1'''' ~"'' ~qo m• sl ao 1•&gt;. 1I
vesti'gated Fri'day by ci' ty II "W11JPIY
m~~.~"',~~~'"'..~~IIN;t;':,'.~~t~·7~;;:~:~~.~~~.
,, •.
•o ll•f ulr loo II•'"I•CII•o ~ I
poii'ce ofll'c·ers The r·Irs t
II G' ~·· Ill ... " ''O~•rt•vl t• t!loltll ·~ ·~·~ 1I
'
~pUltl•'"&lt;'il ••• • '
I
curred on the parking lot at the '--- - -·-- - --- - -·----- ~
State Liquor Store on Third
Ave., where J,auren E. Hoffman, 53, Rt. I, Dexter, backed
his car from a (lllrking space
and slruck a. parked auto
owned by Murray E. Church,
Rt. 1 Crown City There ..
mino~damage toChurch's;as
Asecond mishap occurred~~ .
Vine St. at Johnson 's Market
parking lot where an auto
owned by Jimmie A. Evans,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was struck by
an unknown ·vehicle.
~

AFRANKOVICH""""'~'

l

Tlm:s-SEHI:-It:l.
:
r~""'"
: """"""' ..... '"""'' ,, ,,, 0 ,,. 1
Jl'fll:l,miJIJJdml~
11
1 "' ~;.... L~~~ci~·~t h~~~., .. y ,11 , 1111 N1
1
r\II .1:1
I2G
1 11\ ~~"o tw• '-' ~"· P~''\ OhrQ lH 'JI I
~~~~
·
11 :~.~~;~~~·: ~~:.~~.. ;~·~~,ft~~:~-:t~~..~~r~b {,"· ~ · .

()•,lt •• •~ft n.
,
1
trn ' '"''" Ht. l.tl•"- lh
I II ( u~rr 'I n.,.,n~· 4i 0 f!I &amp;Y I
I s~
f.'ui!II\U M ~""'• .. ,.,._ ,,~ "' "''n'rt~ ~ ·hpl I
rwrD•&gt; f "'' • ,,., "' I&lt; r,,.,H t r;o .. ,.,~!J ,.
,. , ... . ~~( .... ! " '''"• 111 Y O~·ri uo.ri'J•Jri1f! II tho

Beckly wants h ea. d quarters

.
GALLIPO,LIS - Danny 554, at the railroad tracks in lost control of his car on the heavy damage to his car.
Wilson, 18, Rt. 2, Pedro, was BidwelL
railroad tracks and turned
No charge was filed in a rear
charged
with
reckless
According to the Gallia· over. Y!ilson suffered minor end collision at 9:25 p.m. on
operation following a traffic Meigs Post State Highway injuries but was not im- Neighborhood Rd., three tenths
ac~ident Friday night on Rt. Patrol,
Wil son mediately treated. There was of a mile south of Rt. HI. Of·
fleers said an auto driven by
Harland B. Sanders, 17,
Ga llipolis, struck the rear end
of a car driven by Eleanor
Walte~s, 44, Gallipolis, causing
COLUMBUS (UPI )
industry and civic groups, the Representatives and managed
minor damage.
Reports fUed at Secretary of largest being $25,000 from tile to retain only a slight edge in
State Ted W. Brown's office by Education &amp; Executive CO., a tile Ohio Senate and a large · Three morning accidents
tile 4 p.m. Friday deadline for local insurance finn linked margin in tile congressional were investigated Friday. The
first occurred on Little Kyger
campaign expense reports closely witll the OEA.
delegations.
Rd., eight tenths of a niile from
showed 52 groups spent
Other large contributors inGOP Tops Spendlog
Rt.
7 where Roger Goff, 37, Rt.
$341,536 to successfully defeat cluded:
The Republican party I, Cheshire, lost control or his
efforts to repeal Ohio's new
Armco Steel, Middletown, reported spending ,1,703,292 on
income tax last montll.
$10,000; Dayton Chamber of the fall campaign, while car which struck a bridge
'I!le top spender on efforts to COmmerce, $6,200; Goodyear Democrats listed only $343,594 railing. There was heavy
damage to his car.
retain the tax was the Ohio Tire · &amp; Rubber Co., $5,1100; in expenditures.
Moderate damage resulted
Education Association, which Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber CO.,
No reports had been received
!lit $85,250 ln!o the effort $5,000; Citizens for a Better by the deadline from major from an accident at.B:Oli a.m.
spearheaded by the Ohioans Hamilton COunty Inc., $5,1100; coinrnittees backing President on Bob McCormick Rd., six
for Fair Taxation Committee. .and Greater Cleveland Growth Nixon or his Democralic chal- tenths of a mile south of RU60
where cars driven by Jennie
'I!le educational group was Association, $5,1100.
lenger ,
Sen.
George
Holz ~r. 22, Gallipolis, and
solidly behind keeping the tax,
The campaign to abolish tile McGovern.
Barbar~ Stroud, 33, Rt. 1,
since a big portion of the rev- state income tax and require a
"These reports may he in the
enue goes to support public vote by Ohioans on all futu re mall and won't be regarded as Gallipolis, collided on a curve.
schools which in recent years new taxes, listed Issue 2 on tile late if it is shown they were No charjles were filed.
Brian Saunders, 75, Patriot
have been on the verge of ballot, was headed by five mailed prior to 4 p.m. Friday,"
bankruptcy.
mave rick Republi can state Elections Counsel James ~tar Rl., was slightly in(ured in
an accident at !0:50a.m. on the
'I!le committee reported it legislators under the name of Marsh said.
Northup-Patriot Rd .
spent all of the $314,021 it te- the Citizens for Repeal of the
There is no penalty in Ohio
Officers said Saunders car
celved, Including S43,000 It Ohio Income Tax.
campaign laws against late fll.
struck.
a tractor traller which
bon owed from the OEA and
The Cltizem group reported ling by committees, tile indivithe Ohio Farm Boreau and it spent only $16;598 on, Its dualll who fail to comply can't was ln. tile roadway. The rig
wblcb 8IDce bas been repaid. unsucce'ssful efforts, including take office or run lor office !or was owned by F&amp;W Tractor
Sales. its Owner was charged
The OEA said Ill . . . did $5,682 in unpaid biDs. But its five years.
with parking on the roadway.
lllll Include tha ..... .... flve legislative supporters
Marsh said the deadline was
_,-, wblletllrhrlll iuneu were reelected at 'tile Nov. 7 met by 51 of the 58 congresIIIII It OOIIII1IJillld ....., In election.
sional candidates, including
lllr• ll!ltallmiDII, aot Jn.
Other reports flied at tbe aec- the 23 winners He said the Newark 63 Lancaster 35
.1-.
,
•
• L.lncaster FISher 82 Bloom
....... Ill ...... lllln.
. retary of lllte'l office lbowed ..,.en
missing reports may be
Carroll 70
tbe state Replbllcan party In the ChriatmaHiowed mall Pickerlcglon 61 Berne Union 58
C 1 hi::M,_
......... might __. Tuesd
Canal Winchester 79 Amanda
. , , . . . . . . . . . d.. l and ~pent nearly fiwJ tillleCI •
"''-.;u
lruve.
ay,
Clearcreek 76
much u did tile , DeuiOualic and ~ wonJd be considered Millersport SO Liberty Union 60
party lut IIIOIIIb, The GOP last u if 1IMt)&gt; Ctllllplled with the Utica 80 Notlhrldao 62
•--•"·Gran ville 11 Heath 62
from Clllltrol of the Oblo HoUle ol •·
Lakewood 79 Joi&gt;Miown 49

.,_,lin,
.......

and help to refer callers to .and federal government or!ices
individuals, agencies or and programs and other
organizations that might be organizations in tile broad
The Alcoholism 'and Drug helpful in meeting · their . social service fi\•ld a very
Abuse Committee wants to problem·s and needs.
complete county resource
make sure the public un·
For example, the Meigs Care directory has been compiled by
derstands that this is not just a Line, 992-7502, is the number to members of St. John ani! St.
number to call for alcohol or ' call for help in such areas as . Paul Lutheran Churches in
other drug emergencies and marital difficulties, personal Minersville and. Pomeroy and
information. The trained problems, loneliness and guy- this list has been made
volunteer staff will be equipped girl hassels . .The Meigs Care available _to the Care Line
to handle these calls but also Line can help refer to agencies volunteers.
will deal in other crisis in· or individuals to help with
For further information on
tervention problems such as home health needs in the the f\1eigs Care Line needed
suicide prevention, be a center nursing field, welfare and food before the January I opening
to call for information on a stamp information, family date please call the Meigs
wide range of service agencies planning services available in County Alcoholism ·and Drug
and organizatio~s in the county the county,local, county, state Abuse Program and director,
·. Rev. Arthur C. Lund at 992·2010
or at 992-3723 to leave a number
for a return calL
Rev. Stanlen Smith is the
president of the Alcoholism
and Drug Committee and is
cases of Falls City beer, five thieves heavily damaged a heading a fund raising drive to .
cases of Stroh's beer, wine and juke box and several vending help pay the county's portion of
the care line cos~. Ahy ina screwdriver mixture were machines.
taken ·from the Spor.tsman's
The sheriff's department di vidual or organization
Inn located on Rt. 233 in Gallla. Friday returned Marvin G. wishin~ to contribute may send
'fhe property' was valued at Miller, 26, Rt.l;Northup,lu the their contributions to the Meigs
$1,298.50.
Coun ty Jail to begin a 30 day County Alcoholism and Drug
In addition to the beer, the sentence lor escape. Miller had Abuse Program, 231 East
been convicted of assault with Second Street, Pomeroy.,
intent to rape in February,
1971. Following a l-15 year
sentence, he attempted to
escape from sheriff's deputies.
lerseclion of the business loop
Miller was tackled In the hall
on SR 7at Hobson near county outside the Gallia ·County
Tonight~ Moh., Tues.
· road 21, Barry s. Bryant, Common Pleas Courtroom by
Dec. 24·25-26
Rodney, was driving 8 dump Deputy Sheriff Phil Underwood
truck north when he went to and Assistant Prosecuting
THE REV~NGERS
sleep.
. Attorney Jim Bennett.
·
(Technlcolorl
'fhe truck went off the road
Arrested Friday were Dennis
Susan Hayword
William Holden
and struck and ripped down a Dean Bush, 26; Galllpolis
Colorcartoons
stop sign, two guard rail posts Ferry, for DWI and Billy Joe
(PG)
and 36 feel of guardraiL The Oxyer, 20, Rt. I, Cheshire.
Show Starts 7 p.m.
driver was not Injured. There
was light damage to the truck.
No citation was Issued .
At 1a.m. Saturday on SR 124,
one and six tenths mile west of
Route 325, • Roy Robert
Vaughan, 20, Rt. 1, Langsville,
traveling west struck lind
killed an eight point buck deer
1
that ran into the path of his car.
There was damage to the front
of the ca,r, but no personal
injuries.

6 autos damaged

Man injured

•.

.

GALLIPOLIS
About
everything needed lor a wild
party apparently was obtained
in a breaking and entering
investigated Friday by the
Gallia County sheriff's
depariment.
Deputies said six cases of
Pabst Blue RibbOn beer, 10

ANOTIIER DONATION - Bill Mitchell, chairman .of the Gallia COunty
Volunteer Em~rgency Squad co!)llllittee, right, accepts $226 collected by "!embers
of the Mountameers 4-H Club of tile Patriot area. Club members presenting the
mon_ey were left to right, Maryann11 Crouse, advisor; Curt Elliott, vice-president;
Lymta Newberry, who collected the most money,' $72; Drema Waugh, member ;
Bonita Waugh, secretary; Ricky Crouse, treasurer; Joe O'Dell, president. Mrs.
Crouse had challenged other 4-H clubs to conduct a similar project.

Ohio's income tax law

.,

tifying information unless they
so desire.

21 Cases of beer stolen

·y oung Gallia driver charged

1:00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Irs Your Bets; Green
Acres 10; Watch Your Child 15.
1:30-3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As The
World Turns 8, 10. ·
·
2:00 - ·Daya of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game13; Mike
DouGlass 6; GuldlnA Light S, 10.
.,
2:30- 'Doctors 3, 4, 15; Oatlng ,Game 13; Edge of Nlghtl, 10.
3:00- General Hospltal6, 13; Another World 3, 4, 15; Love Is
Splendored Thing a, 10; Just Generation 20.
3:il0 - Return to Peykln Place 3, 4, 15; Secret Storm a. 10; One
Life fo llye ,6, 13.
4:00- Mr. Cartoori 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. 33; Love,
American Style 13; Marv Griffin 4; Fllntstones 6; Gilligan's
Isle Casanova Brown 10.
4: 25 Club 6.
Petticoat Junction 3; Daniel Bciono 13;
GriHith 15.
Rogera33, 20; Ponder- 3, 4; Daniel
Mlill 15.
.
Elec:. Co. 33; Dragnet 8; Gomer Pyle
20.
'
- ~=20; Around The hnd 33. .
I I
ol .INnnle 13; o.-tng
,l'veGotAStcrel13; Film IJ; Elacfrlc

POMEROY - The Meigs
Counly Alcoholism and Drug
Abu~ Prognim is setting up
tlie final arrangements for a
Meigs County Care Line.
T~e Care tlne wlll bec.ome
an operation.on .lanuary 1, and
be staffed '· by trained volunteers' between the hours or 4
p.m. and 4 a,m. seven days per
week.
The number to call has been
designated as 992-7502. All calls
made to the Meigs Care Line
will be kept strictly confidential and the caller 'need
notgiye his or her name, phone
number or any other iden-

~P""IPI~N

Qnd

11 110

•• •

l(l(dl

.
II

GOlDit
'

~
•

'.

6I""'.HEJaMT

·oor •

~01
Gio;mocM..
d

,

II

frll'!l

COlUM8VIPICTuRES IPOJ

~•••

And now a word
about loans from

Shaker .Heights 67 Garlleld
Heights 62
Midpark 39 Mayf i el~ 26

our Family Banking
Center:

Brecksville 67 Independen ce 54
Kenslon West Geouga 53

sa

Kirtland 61 Beachwood 42
Elyria Catholic 76 Lake
Catholic 47
.
Elyria 48 Marion Harding 45
Strongsville 58 Columbia A6
North Olmsted 70 Westlake 56
Bedf or~ 76 Men lor &lt;9
·
Maple Heights 108 Eas11ake
North sa
.
Ot-ange 62 Solon 57
Ashtabula 71 Jeflerson 58
Mldvlew 65 Amherst 61
Steubenville Central 64 Mar·
tlno Ferry 47

~i]•'

~

YES.

'

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money Back

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

·A&amp;P
Egg Nog
qt

69~
"109 fEARS Of S£RVIC£"

�'

•

4- !be Sunday Times- Se'ntinel, Sunday ,Tlec. 24, 1972
; .. ''# W'\H '
;,:,:~.:OIW X ·o·o, .,., p·,··=~:~:::::::;:~~&lt;::::;~:~~::::::::~,Y~:@lt""'·~ ·;o ,.,.

;:. 1\TO_tBS from
1. the stud·lO.
.

children to have help locating sources
of raw materials to replenish lhe
usually limiW&lt;I supply provided in kit
form.
If number painting is enjoyed, shop
the art supply stores for a blank canvas
board and half a dmen tubes of
By Kat! Meek
pigment. Asketch can be made on that
Arllst·ln·Reoldence
canvas,
even · numbering areas lo
GALUPOIJS- A special rnessage
to the Santas who are giving cratt and correspond to the tube paint colors
whereupQn that leap into creativity has
art kits to children !his season :
Give the gift of interest, and 'give been made.
. II is easier for children to take that
encouragement with them . 'Commercially assembled kits . are often leap than for adults. The fear of failure
excellent learning devices, whether and the fear of wasting materials
wood-burning sets, a paint-by-number prevents many adults from ever trying
or crochet and afghan kit, if, after the to be creative.
I have seen and talked with many
· basic skills are mastered, the recipient .
people
quite skilled with the techniques
· is encl!uraged to use lltose skills to work
of crocheting, wQOCI-worklhR or tying
, out his own designs.
·

11t

..

•

::~e d!n:~Y;~~g i~%~u~yuc":!~

proven darn near impossible for me to
convince them that nearly anyone
capable or following the. intricate instructions of others, has more than
enough imagination to do his own
designing.
The thing Jacking; ·more than
ability ,1s courage. The best way I know
to·help the growth of courage and self
confidence is to encourage each other,
especially for parents . to encourage
their children.
. We all need to help one anot,her
believe that the only_failures possible,
when trying something new, is the
failure to learn from the mistakes and
the failure to try again.
Happy Christmas Eve tO all!

Coming
Events

§

~

i.

nu&lt;:

EMPIRE

REV. BILLY PAYNE will be
preaching at Walnut Ridge
Church at 7 p. m.

STARTS TUES., DEC. 26 THRU SAT., DEC. 30
STORE HOURS: TUES., WED. &amp;SAT. 9 AM TO 5 PM
,tHURSDAY 9.AM TO 12 'NOON-FRIDAY 9 AM TO 8 PM

,&gt;
'

Youth to have
film festival

AT LEAST
10 MATCHING

DINING ROOM CHAIRS
Mostly One Of A Kind

COUCHES &amp; CHAIRS
..
.·
•
•

·Three men

c~t 'u p

day afternoon, From t e left are Ralph Trussell, Bashan Fire
Dt.partment; RDss Cleland, Chester; Henry Werry,
Pomeroy;· Ernest Sisson, Racine; Bob Byer, Middleport;
Grant Boring, Olive TownShip Department; Kenneth
Michael, Rutland, and !!ill Rice, Syracuse.

PRICE

in aparltnent

.

•
PT. PLEASANT.._,. Two men Haven are in ICU. James Gary · '1 :30 p.m. in an apartment
were placed in the lntenllve is reporW&lt;!, in "satl.sfactory" house at the corner of Fourth
Care Unit and a third was condition and Warren is said to and Main Streets.
admitW&lt;J to Pleasant Valley be in ''fair" condition. Both
It was still under InHospital late Friday night with have lacerations of !he ab- vestigation Saturday. No
., ,
lacerations received in what do.men.
charges had been filed. The
· pnlice called -''11 knifing" at a
Wendell Barker, 32, of Third 1 injured were rushed 1o the
residence in New Haven.
Street, New Haven was ad- IOI!pl hospital in a New Haven
James GII,I'Y Teter, 18, and mitted for observation and was Emergency Squad ambulance.
his brother~ Warren Teter, 19, said to be in "good" condition State pollee, and others
both of Fourth Street in New with facial lacerations.
assisW&lt;I in making blood runs
New Haven police chief during the night for those
Tommy Parsons said the admitW&lt;I during !he night's
r
altercation took place around

' " '
I

1

1

BOX SPRINGS
&amp;
'I

Darja

DARLA NEUTZLING

•••
••

SPECIAL! .

Miss Neutzling

.
tt
rstr~r:~l
· ,,itJ.G -.. MIJ.!

PRICE

••
••

emergency cases.
In another incident, Adrian
Mayes of Henderson was admitW&lt;J to the Intensive care
Unit of Pleasant Valley
Hospital where he is reporW&lt;t
tobe in "fair" condition today.
A aheriff's deputy said
Mayes was cut about the throat
and was taken from a
residence on Chestnut Street in
Henderson in a Wilcoxen
ambulance to the hospital.

GROUP OF

TABLES
-,

L.f\l 'l" ? IIC1JOB

,, w

SET
lWIN OR
REGULAR

'FROM EVERYONE AT
•

SAVE

$50

SET

100 w. Main

st:

Pomeroy, Ohio

.00

SPECIAL!

SPECIAL!

HOOVER·
SWEEPERS

.WHIRLPOOL

WITH HEADLIGHT

88.

ON

Model LXE5500

Model LXA5540

95

'

THE PAIR

In White or Avocado

underwedge sole

and heel . Size: C7-12, E6-14,
.
\,., EEE6·12.
'
~
11·1553- Tanbark Range.
\' ·\ (' · H1~.. Black Neoprene
~!,
cushion.. crepe pyramid~
;_;., tread sole and heel .
. ,_, ~ Otherwise same .
.,, ;;.·~ Sizes: C8-12, E6- ~.~~7., v . 12.

'

~

16-IS7J- Tanbark Range·
,. Hide. 8-lnch boot with ·
cushion Insole and cookie.
Steel shank. Bross shank.
and-toe nails. Sure·grlp
lugged Vlbram sole an~
heel.
Sizes: E6 1h-12.
1
me . plus
and Insulated.

tile H)'lel'aper wo r I d Is
IIIIa lleePie or the Church
of llle lloly Spirit. It's
••wrl)lped up" for a reno·

vadH jolt.

I'JN.ATION ACCEPt EO
q:KAIMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
. . . J. Gllllgan praised the
.._ ..r dlltlnsui.lhed service
flt(lmlltGn Qlunty Municipal
Qlilrt lqe Clarence Denning
illltlll'llllnlrt Die. 31.
t

- MANY SLIGHTLY
DAMAGED ITEMS
'AT

TREMENDOUS
SAVINGS
•

'

ON

.

llt1NICR'8 ANSWE R 1o

MENS WORK SHOES

SAVINGS

OVER •11.99

DAN THOMAS &amp;·soN
.
"SERVING YOU SINCE 1936"
324 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

annual Christma~ dinner M
, ADDISON - The annual
.; Christmas dinner of the Ad·
.&lt; dison Freewill Baptist Church
' Ladies Aid was held Wed~nesday evening In the
;·hasement of the church.
::: President lnga McCoy gave
("a · welcoming speech and the
. Walter Patterson, pastor
the church, thanked the
~rg,,u~' for the outstanding work
·mov have done in the church.
Dencil McCoy, deacon,
each lady, with a
carnation corsage.
festive dinner of ham,
rarious vegeta~ I pie and
was served. Royal Crown
and Dan-Dee Chips were
ji!o,na~ed by local companies.
There were 23 members and
guests present. Christmas
were exchanged by the
;!8e•cret Sisters.
Officials of the Ladles Aid
Inga McCoy, president;

Freda Cottrill, vice-president;
Shirley Martin, secretary;
Layunie Nibert, treasurer, and
Mary Barcus, publicity
· chairman.

WSCS en':t.i0./'1IS·
tU""L.e!
11 -lt'nner
r A: _,
Ui
CENTENARY The
Centenary WSCS held its
December meeting at the
church . A potluck . dinner
featuring turkey and all the
trinunings was enjoyed by
membel'!l, their families and
friends.
A social hour was held.
following the dinner with Mrs.
John Longley leading the
children in songs and games
and Mr. Longley leading the
adulbi. A gift exchange was
enjoyed by all at ·the close of
lhe. evening.

LAMPS
·.PICTURES

A

Th

axton
s'end.s' tf.J,TAanks
fS,

BErTY CANARY

Ah, Snowy Beauty
(First Day Thrill)

LUCASVILLE - Mrs. Edna
Thaxton, Lucasville, Ohio,
wishes to ·thank the many.
many friends who sent cards
·and letters of congratulations
By BETTY CANARY
on her 93rd birthday. They
When the first gentle snowflake came down I grew
came from five different rapturous. It is always the s~me.
-"'
states. Over a period of two
I talk glowingly of Mother Nature's soft white blanket.
weeks, she received 76 cards 1 view frost-rimmed branches with delight and ga~e in
and 16letters. Many were from awe at the sculpting done by wind and snow. ·
people whom she had not ·seen
At th~ ·l!wment, however.. I feel is if I've just stepped
for many Y.aars.
' oU:t ~(lap~!lltlex. iiee: Wint~. ~he d~fid Of.
'
The
white
blanMet
has
alrea(jy
turned
into
a
gray
quilt.
All Mrs. Thaxton had just
returned home, after spending Three branches of my f~vorfte lila~ h,ave broken under
the weight of ice. And l ,Just realized. Those pieces .of
.ten days in the hospital, these sculpture are two garbage .cans, a bike, the lawn mower
greetings brought much cheer and, probably, the wastebasket I've been missing from
and sunshine. Mrs. Thaxton
my bathroom for weeks.
regrets that she cannot answer
It's always the same.
It won't be long until I'll be scratching H E L P on
each one personally, but sin1
the windows.
cerely thanks all who
It won't be long until I'll be crying out in a small
remembered.
voice, "Whither spring?''
Already up and down the street, one hears men shout·
:ng steamy curses as they fit jumper cables to car bat·
teries.
Up a.r.d down the street, little children sit on sleds
while wearing ice skates. whining. "Whatterwegonna00?"
'
'
I look as if I've experimented with my hair and . Invented static electricity.
What with having dogs, cats and children playing con·
stanlly in the basement, the only way I can get through
to the laundry room is with a swami&gt; buggy.
The children have already lost so many gloves and
scarves that I've figured out the reason- they have a
side deal going with the local discount house.
My husband threatened me the other night-()ne more
pot of chili and you're OUT, he .said.
1 just got a Christmas present. A friend in Florida sent
me a crate of oranges. No, I'm not grateful. She's probably in on a plot to drive me bonkers.
The one thought that sustains me is gettin~ through
the holidays and into February. February is st11l winter,
but it's also the shortest month of any season .

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday. Dec. 24, the
3S8th day of 1972 with seven. to
Seamless cup bandeau of Dacron
_ _ __j
follow . It is Christmas Eve .
Ughlly fibed illed. 32-36A, 32-38 B,C.
0563. Seamle&gt;S cup bandeau wilh unde,.,ire oupport.
The moon is approaching lis
reg. ,5.00 NOW ,3.99 Of Docron polyester tricot. 32·38 B,C.
rog, ~.00 NOW!J4.!19.1 tast quarter.
The morning stars are
32-38.0 reg, $7.00'
Mercury, Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Jupiter
and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Capricorn.
American frontiersman Kit
carson was born Dec. 24, 1809.
On this day in history :
In 1814, a peace treaty
between the UniW&lt;I States and
Great Britain was signed. II
brought an end to the War of
1812.
In 1865, six men, most of
them veterans of !he COnfederate Army, organized a secret
Shoper pantie girdle with speci al strength
.
,
.
.
.
!,.=-4 fraternal
society in Pulaski,
IPconels on sides, front a nd bod. S·M· l-Xl.
0715. Shaper pCinlte 91rdle w1th h1gh r1se wa lstl•ns.
rog.$9.00 NOW$7.49.
M-l-Xl.
reg. ,11.00 NOW$9.29,
Tenn., known as the Ku Klux
XX
rog.$12.00 NOW$10.29.
Klan . .
0718. Shoper lo ng stride pantie girdle with high rise
In 1942, Adm . Jean Louis
wolstline. M+Xl. reg. $12.00 NOW $10.29.
Xavier Francois Darlan, the
XX·3X
rog.$13.00 NOW$11.29.
French administrator of North
Africa, was assassinated as a
sympathizer or the
Vichy regime.

p~ol:::ye::st:::erj_

BIG
SAYINGS
ALLWB ·

GINGER A. ELLCF.SSOR
GALUFOUS- ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and
M"s. Deryl Ellcessor, 80 Lo&lt;:'JSt St., are proud to amounce the
engagement of their daughter, Ginger Annette, to Tim Hemsworth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Hemsworth, 1813 Chestnut St.,
GallipQlis. Miss Ellcessor, a 1969 graduate of GaUia Academy
High School, will graduate from Miami University in .Mareh of
1973. Mr. Hemsworth, a 1970 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School, is also attending Miami University. The wedding will be
an event of June 24, at the Grace United Metbodist Church.

Your favorite FORMFIT ROGERS' foundations
are now on SALE.

~~i62.

Gallipolis, .Ohio

Winners announced
Winners In the Falrvle;. •
Spring Vfllley Decoration
Contest held Friday
ed g· t night,·
d
were announc
a ur ay.
They are, Mr. and Mrs. LoweD
Gothard for "Belt Overall"
with Mr. and Mrs. OUs Johnson
· as runnerup; . Mr.- an d Mrs.
Larry Spees for "Best Door"
with Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Samples as runnerup ;'and Mr.
and Mrs. William Schoonover
for "Best Rellglous Theme"
. with Mr.. and Mrs. David ]&gt;olen
as runnerup.
Judges were Mrs. Bob
Evans, Mrs. Gene Wetherholt
and David Lyons.
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric' will present the
winners with plaques.
A. Hill,l9, Gallipolis, cook, and
Lisa Kay Atkins, .17, Galli~&gt;Qiis, ·
student. James E. Vornholt,
Jr., 22, Gallipolis, and
Kathleeh Sue Thomas, 31,
Gallipolis, at home.

me."

SHAPE UP AND SAVE

WASHERS&amp; DRYERS

ALL
16-155- Cactus Ran~e ­
Hide. 8-in ch boot w1lh
natural leather welt.
Cushion Insole with cookie.

Addison Ladies Aid has
'

OR MORE

KING
SIZE

137 Pine St.
Gallipolis, Ohio

GALLIPOIJS - How long .
has it been .since you had a
good laugh or a big fright over
one of your old movie
favorites? Well, here's your
chance! The youth of Grace
UniW&lt;J Methodist Church are
planning an old-time film
festival for New Year's Eve.
The films include such stars
as Laurel and Hardy, the.
Keyston~ Cops and W. C.'
.
D~SE D. SLU~
. OAK HILL- APPROACHING MARRIAGE- Mrs. Ray E. Fields. Also, there will be two
Slusser of Chelsea, Mich., is amouncing the engagement and full-length features : "The
approaching marriage of her daughter, Denise Diana, to Ted Phantom of the Opera" and
Fortner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse .Fortner of Rt. 1, Oak Hill. The· "The Hunchback of Notre
bride-elect is a 1971 graduate of Chelsea High School, and is now Dame"· bo·th starring the
attending Eastern Michigan University. Mr. Fortner is a 1967 fantastic "Man of a Thousand
graduate of Southwestern High School. He served in the armed Faces," Lon Chaney.
The show will begin at 8 p.m.
forces in Vietnam, and is presently employed by the Dana
and
lhe donation for admission
Corporation of Chelsea, Mich. He plans to attend Eastern
is one dollar. Refreshments are
University in the Fall.
. free.
Everyone is invlW&lt;t to attend
the time of Fellowship and the
New Year's Eve Watch Night
Service following the film.

QUEEN
SIZE

SET

OUT WITH THE OLDIN WITH THE NEW!

21 .1ron

~il

•I

N;t':fzling, daughter of Mr. al)d
Mrs. Richard Neutzllng, 496
Lincoln Hill Road, Pomeroy,
has been selecW&lt;J as "Student
of the Quarter" by the faculty
of Mountain State College,
Parkersburg.
'
. Miss Neutzling was selected
for the honor based on attitude,
scholarship, personality and
cooperation. She earned a 4.0
grade average based on a 4.0
scale. She has been presenW&lt;J a
certificate issued by the United
Business School Association, a
copy of which will accompany
her diploma at graduation and
will
be
recorded
at
Waahingtcin, D. C:, designating
her as an · honor student in
business edu~atlon.
-Miss Neutzling graduaW&lt;I
from the Meigs· High School ln
June, 1972 and enrolled at
Mountain State College In
September.

GAI.IJPOUS - "Christmas superintendents were Mrs .
"'
.:.ve AI Home," a play written Arthur Rupe, Mrs . · Roger
.
. HQOCI, Mrs. Edwt' n Edelblute,
for Sunday
School pupil .·par- ·
Ucipation by Mrs. Wilson Wahl, Miss Hazel HJlley ·
was presenW&lt;I last Wednesday
Mrs. Hood was aiso !he
evening to an ••p.prec18
· ti've pianist for the evening. Pastor
congregation that !illed the Wilson Wahl led lhe opening
First
Baptist
Church Christmas C.rol sung by the
auditorium.
congregation and invocation
The play had its setting in followed by Harry E. Cole,
any Bible teaching church, as a associate pastor. Words· of
· te res.cu
•·• t·n welcome and announcemen'·
Youth
. group was m
"'
knowing how other families were then given by Pastor
and groups honor Christ at Wahl as was the benediction at
the close of the service.
Christmas time. A letter was
written to a Christian
Children 's Home inquiring
about !heir Christmas plans.
The head of the home, Aunt
ASK TO WED
Martha, answered the letter
GALI,IPOLIS - Three
and as the letter was read, ' couples applied for . marriage
various children •s depart- licenses Friday in Probate
ments of !he Baptist Sunday Court.
School appeared and acW&lt;I out
They were Michael E.
the letter by singing Christmas Elliott, 22, Gallipotis, student
carols and quoting many Bible and RebecCa Sue Lakin, 22,
verses relative to Christ's Gallipolis, beautician. Charles
birth, life and death, .plus
several personal testimonies of
what "Christmas means to

SUNDAY
Victory Baptist Church
Youth Fellowship will present
a play, "The Miracle" al7 p.m.
Everyone welcome.

NOW.AT THE ·

ODDS &amp; ENDS

IN APPREqA TION of their efforts for , the good of
Meigs County, Edison Hobstetter, president qf the Pomeroy
National Bank, center, on behalf of the bank presented $100
checks to each of the county's eight fire,departmenbi Thurs-

Pupils ·present play

~'a m::·:·~,·~wo·~~~

A lhought lor the day :
Novelist James Thurber said,
"You might as well fall flat on
your lace as lean over too far
backward."

The play was directed by the
author, Mrs. Wahl, asslsW&lt;J by
Jack Carter, Ughtiog; Luke
Settle and Pastor Wahl, sound;
Mrs. Smeltzer Rose, costumes;
Miss Patty Kinder, scenery,
and Mrs. :;stavaun Matthews
and Mrs. Mohler Marlin,
coaching. The departmental

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

Samuel J . Tilden re·
ceived a majority popular
vote in the 1876 prestdential
election, but wasn't chosen
because he Jacked one elec·
toral vote, due to a dispute
over electoral votes from
four states. Congress then
appointed a special electoral commissIon com.
prised of eight Republicans
and seven Democrats who
selected Ruthe .rford B.
Hayes by a strict party
vote, The World Almanac
notes.

Mar the awHt loy.
of Chriatmaa BU lh1 IIICIIII
of you cmd YDUIJ. now cmd ,,_ _

Department
Store

AND

TO

STORE-WIDE
Keepsake Diamond Solltairtl
The u~imate in beauty .,rtd bri~
llance . .. Keepsake Solitaires,
euantnleed, reil!lered, porlect.

DON'T MISS THIS SALEI
IT'S A BIGGIE 1111

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE
2 COMPLETE FLOORS OF FABRICS &amp;
h-"'TIONS

STORE

·-

342 Second Ave •
Gallipolis, Ohio
,,..,_,._.,.~

.... MtiiJ,....MIII,.._

SIMPLICITY, McCALLS, BUTTE RICK, VOGUE
WE 00 CUSTOM ORESS MAKIN'
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE

PATTERN~

.

'

-·'

51 Court

�'

•

4- !be Sunday Times- Se'ntinel, Sunday ,Tlec. 24, 1972
; .. ''# W'\H '
;,:,:~.:OIW X ·o·o, .,., p·,··=~:~:::::::;:~~&lt;::::;~:~~::::::::~,Y~:@lt""'·~ ·;o ,.,.

;:. 1\TO_tBS from
1. the stud·lO.
.

children to have help locating sources
of raw materials to replenish lhe
usually limiW&lt;I supply provided in kit
form.
If number painting is enjoyed, shop
the art supply stores for a blank canvas
board and half a dmen tubes of
By Kat! Meek
pigment. Asketch can be made on that
Arllst·ln·Reoldence
canvas,
even · numbering areas lo
GALUPOIJS- A special rnessage
to the Santas who are giving cratt and correspond to the tube paint colors
whereupQn that leap into creativity has
art kits to children !his season :
Give the gift of interest, and 'give been made.
. II is easier for children to take that
encouragement with them . 'Commercially assembled kits . are often leap than for adults. The fear of failure
excellent learning devices, whether and the fear of wasting materials
wood-burning sets, a paint-by-number prevents many adults from ever trying
or crochet and afghan kit, if, after the to be creative.
I have seen and talked with many
· basic skills are mastered, the recipient .
people
quite skilled with the techniques
· is encl!uraged to use lltose skills to work
of crocheting, wQOCI-worklhR or tying
, out his own designs.
·

11t

..

•

::~e d!n:~Y;~~g i~%~u~yuc":!~

proven darn near impossible for me to
convince them that nearly anyone
capable or following the. intricate instructions of others, has more than
enough imagination to do his own
designing.
The thing Jacking; ·more than
ability ,1s courage. The best way I know
to·help the growth of courage and self
confidence is to encourage each other,
especially for parents . to encourage
their children.
. We all need to help one anot,her
believe that the only_failures possible,
when trying something new, is the
failure to learn from the mistakes and
the failure to try again.
Happy Christmas Eve tO all!

Coming
Events

§

~

i.

nu&lt;:

EMPIRE

REV. BILLY PAYNE will be
preaching at Walnut Ridge
Church at 7 p. m.

STARTS TUES., DEC. 26 THRU SAT., DEC. 30
STORE HOURS: TUES., WED. &amp;SAT. 9 AM TO 5 PM
,tHURSDAY 9.AM TO 12 'NOON-FRIDAY 9 AM TO 8 PM

,&gt;
'

Youth to have
film festival

AT LEAST
10 MATCHING

DINING ROOM CHAIRS
Mostly One Of A Kind

COUCHES &amp; CHAIRS
..
.·
•
•

·Three men

c~t 'u p

day afternoon, From t e left are Ralph Trussell, Bashan Fire
Dt.partment; RDss Cleland, Chester; Henry Werry,
Pomeroy;· Ernest Sisson, Racine; Bob Byer, Middleport;
Grant Boring, Olive TownShip Department; Kenneth
Michael, Rutland, and !!ill Rice, Syracuse.

PRICE

in aparltnent

.

•
PT. PLEASANT.._,. Two men Haven are in ICU. James Gary · '1 :30 p.m. in an apartment
were placed in the lntenllve is reporW&lt;!, in "satl.sfactory" house at the corner of Fourth
Care Unit and a third was condition and Warren is said to and Main Streets.
admitW&lt;J to Pleasant Valley be in ''fair" condition. Both
It was still under InHospital late Friday night with have lacerations of !he ab- vestigation Saturday. No
., ,
lacerations received in what do.men.
charges had been filed. The
· pnlice called -''11 knifing" at a
Wendell Barker, 32, of Third 1 injured were rushed 1o the
residence in New Haven.
Street, New Haven was ad- IOI!pl hospital in a New Haven
James GII,I'Y Teter, 18, and mitted for observation and was Emergency Squad ambulance.
his brother~ Warren Teter, 19, said to be in "good" condition State pollee, and others
both of Fourth Street in New with facial lacerations.
assisW&lt;I in making blood runs
New Haven police chief during the night for those
Tommy Parsons said the admitW&lt;I during !he night's
r
altercation took place around

' " '
I

1

1

BOX SPRINGS
&amp;
'I

Darja

DARLA NEUTZLING

•••
••

SPECIAL! .

Miss Neutzling

.
tt
rstr~r:~l
· ,,itJ.G -.. MIJ.!

PRICE

••
••

emergency cases.
In another incident, Adrian
Mayes of Henderson was admitW&lt;J to the Intensive care
Unit of Pleasant Valley
Hospital where he is reporW&lt;t
tobe in "fair" condition today.
A aheriff's deputy said
Mayes was cut about the throat
and was taken from a
residence on Chestnut Street in
Henderson in a Wilcoxen
ambulance to the hospital.

GROUP OF

TABLES
-,

L.f\l 'l" ? IIC1JOB

,, w

SET
lWIN OR
REGULAR

'FROM EVERYONE AT
•

SAVE

$50

SET

100 w. Main

st:

Pomeroy, Ohio

.00

SPECIAL!

SPECIAL!

HOOVER·
SWEEPERS

.WHIRLPOOL

WITH HEADLIGHT

88.

ON

Model LXE5500

Model LXA5540

95

'

THE PAIR

In White or Avocado

underwedge sole

and heel . Size: C7-12, E6-14,
.
\,., EEE6·12.
'
~
11·1553- Tanbark Range.
\' ·\ (' · H1~.. Black Neoprene
~!,
cushion.. crepe pyramid~
;_;., tread sole and heel .
. ,_, ~ Otherwise same .
.,, ;;.·~ Sizes: C8-12, E6- ~.~~7., v . 12.

'

~

16-IS7J- Tanbark Range·
,. Hide. 8-lnch boot with ·
cushion Insole and cookie.
Steel shank. Bross shank.
and-toe nails. Sure·grlp
lugged Vlbram sole an~
heel.
Sizes: E6 1h-12.
1
me . plus
and Insulated.

tile H)'lel'aper wo r I d Is
IIIIa lleePie or the Church
of llle lloly Spirit. It's
••wrl)lped up" for a reno·

vadH jolt.

I'JN.ATION ACCEPt EO
q:KAIMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
. . . J. Gllllgan praised the
.._ ..r dlltlnsui.lhed service
flt(lmlltGn Qlunty Municipal
Qlilrt lqe Clarence Denning
illltlll'llllnlrt Die. 31.
t

- MANY SLIGHTLY
DAMAGED ITEMS
'AT

TREMENDOUS
SAVINGS
•

'

ON

.

llt1NICR'8 ANSWE R 1o

MENS WORK SHOES

SAVINGS

OVER •11.99

DAN THOMAS &amp;·soN
.
"SERVING YOU SINCE 1936"
324 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

annual Christma~ dinner M
, ADDISON - The annual
.; Christmas dinner of the Ad·
.&lt; dison Freewill Baptist Church
' Ladies Aid was held Wed~nesday evening In the
;·hasement of the church.
::: President lnga McCoy gave
("a · welcoming speech and the
. Walter Patterson, pastor
the church, thanked the
~rg,,u~' for the outstanding work
·mov have done in the church.
Dencil McCoy, deacon,
each lady, with a
carnation corsage.
festive dinner of ham,
rarious vegeta~ I pie and
was served. Royal Crown
and Dan-Dee Chips were
ji!o,na~ed by local companies.
There were 23 members and
guests present. Christmas
were exchanged by the
;!8e•cret Sisters.
Officials of the Ladles Aid
Inga McCoy, president;

Freda Cottrill, vice-president;
Shirley Martin, secretary;
Layunie Nibert, treasurer, and
Mary Barcus, publicity
· chairman.

WSCS en':t.i0./'1IS·
tU""L.e!
11 -lt'nner
r A: _,
Ui
CENTENARY The
Centenary WSCS held its
December meeting at the
church . A potluck . dinner
featuring turkey and all the
trinunings was enjoyed by
membel'!l, their families and
friends.
A social hour was held.
following the dinner with Mrs.
John Longley leading the
children in songs and games
and Mr. Longley leading the
adulbi. A gift exchange was
enjoyed by all at ·the close of
lhe. evening.

LAMPS
·.PICTURES

A

Th

axton
s'end.s' tf.J,TAanks
fS,

BErTY CANARY

Ah, Snowy Beauty
(First Day Thrill)

LUCASVILLE - Mrs. Edna
Thaxton, Lucasville, Ohio,
wishes to ·thank the many.
many friends who sent cards
·and letters of congratulations
By BETTY CANARY
on her 93rd birthday. They
When the first gentle snowflake came down I grew
came from five different rapturous. It is always the s~me.
-"'
states. Over a period of two
I talk glowingly of Mother Nature's soft white blanket.
weeks, she received 76 cards 1 view frost-rimmed branches with delight and ga~e in
and 16letters. Many were from awe at the sculpting done by wind and snow. ·
people whom she had not ·seen
At th~ ·l!wment, however.. I feel is if I've just stepped
for many Y.aars.
' oU:t ~(lap~!lltlex. iiee: Wint~. ~he d~fid Of.
'
The
white
blanMet
has
alrea(jy
turned
into
a
gray
quilt.
All Mrs. Thaxton had just
returned home, after spending Three branches of my f~vorfte lila~ h,ave broken under
the weight of ice. And l ,Just realized. Those pieces .of
.ten days in the hospital, these sculpture are two garbage .cans, a bike, the lawn mower
greetings brought much cheer and, probably, the wastebasket I've been missing from
and sunshine. Mrs. Thaxton
my bathroom for weeks.
regrets that she cannot answer
It's always the same.
It won't be long until I'll be scratching H E L P on
each one personally, but sin1
the windows.
cerely thanks all who
It won't be long until I'll be crying out in a small
remembered.
voice, "Whither spring?''
Already up and down the street, one hears men shout·
:ng steamy curses as they fit jumper cables to car bat·
teries.
Up a.r.d down the street, little children sit on sleds
while wearing ice skates. whining. "Whatterwegonna00?"
'
'
I look as if I've experimented with my hair and . Invented static electricity.
What with having dogs, cats and children playing con·
stanlly in the basement, the only way I can get through
to the laundry room is with a swami&gt; buggy.
The children have already lost so many gloves and
scarves that I've figured out the reason- they have a
side deal going with the local discount house.
My husband threatened me the other night-()ne more
pot of chili and you're OUT, he .said.
1 just got a Christmas present. A friend in Florida sent
me a crate of oranges. No, I'm not grateful. She's probably in on a plot to drive me bonkers.
The one thought that sustains me is gettin~ through
the holidays and into February. February is st11l winter,
but it's also the shortest month of any season .

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday. Dec. 24, the
3S8th day of 1972 with seven. to
Seamless cup bandeau of Dacron
_ _ __j
follow . It is Christmas Eve .
Ughlly fibed illed. 32-36A, 32-38 B,C.
0563. Seamle&gt;S cup bandeau wilh unde,.,ire oupport.
The moon is approaching lis
reg. ,5.00 NOW ,3.99 Of Docron polyester tricot. 32·38 B,C.
rog, ~.00 NOW!J4.!19.1 tast quarter.
The morning stars are
32-38.0 reg, $7.00'
Mercury, Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Jupiter
and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Capricorn.
American frontiersman Kit
carson was born Dec. 24, 1809.
On this day in history :
In 1814, a peace treaty
between the UniW&lt;I States and
Great Britain was signed. II
brought an end to the War of
1812.
In 1865, six men, most of
them veterans of !he COnfederate Army, organized a secret
Shoper pantie girdle with speci al strength
.
,
.
.
.
!,.=-4 fraternal
society in Pulaski,
IPconels on sides, front a nd bod. S·M· l-Xl.
0715. Shaper pCinlte 91rdle w1th h1gh r1se wa lstl•ns.
rog.$9.00 NOW$7.49.
M-l-Xl.
reg. ,11.00 NOW$9.29,
Tenn., known as the Ku Klux
XX
rog.$12.00 NOW$10.29.
Klan . .
0718. Shoper lo ng stride pantie girdle with high rise
In 1942, Adm . Jean Louis
wolstline. M+Xl. reg. $12.00 NOW $10.29.
Xavier Francois Darlan, the
XX·3X
rog.$13.00 NOW$11.29.
French administrator of North
Africa, was assassinated as a
sympathizer or the
Vichy regime.

p~ol:::ye::st:::erj_

BIG
SAYINGS
ALLWB ·

GINGER A. ELLCF.SSOR
GALUFOUS- ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and
M"s. Deryl Ellcessor, 80 Lo&lt;:'JSt St., are proud to amounce the
engagement of their daughter, Ginger Annette, to Tim Hemsworth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Hemsworth, 1813 Chestnut St.,
GallipQlis. Miss Ellcessor, a 1969 graduate of GaUia Academy
High School, will graduate from Miami University in .Mareh of
1973. Mr. Hemsworth, a 1970 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School, is also attending Miami University. The wedding will be
an event of June 24, at the Grace United Metbodist Church.

Your favorite FORMFIT ROGERS' foundations
are now on SALE.

~~i62.

Gallipolis, .Ohio

Winners announced
Winners In the Falrvle;. •
Spring Vfllley Decoration
Contest held Friday
ed g· t night,·
d
were announc
a ur ay.
They are, Mr. and Mrs. LoweD
Gothard for "Belt Overall"
with Mr. and Mrs. OUs Johnson
· as runnerup; . Mr.- an d Mrs.
Larry Spees for "Best Door"
with Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Samples as runnerup ;'and Mr.
and Mrs. William Schoonover
for "Best Rellglous Theme"
. with Mr.. and Mrs. David ]&gt;olen
as runnerup.
Judges were Mrs. Bob
Evans, Mrs. Gene Wetherholt
and David Lyons.
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric' will present the
winners with plaques.
A. Hill,l9, Gallipolis, cook, and
Lisa Kay Atkins, .17, Galli~&gt;Qiis, ·
student. James E. Vornholt,
Jr., 22, Gallipolis, and
Kathleeh Sue Thomas, 31,
Gallipolis, at home.

me."

SHAPE UP AND SAVE

WASHERS&amp; DRYERS

ALL
16-155- Cactus Ran~e ­
Hide. 8-in ch boot w1lh
natural leather welt.
Cushion Insole with cookie.

Addison Ladies Aid has
'

OR MORE

KING
SIZE

137 Pine St.
Gallipolis, Ohio

GALLIPOIJS - How long .
has it been .since you had a
good laugh or a big fright over
one of your old movie
favorites? Well, here's your
chance! The youth of Grace
UniW&lt;J Methodist Church are
planning an old-time film
festival for New Year's Eve.
The films include such stars
as Laurel and Hardy, the.
Keyston~ Cops and W. C.'
.
D~SE D. SLU~
. OAK HILL- APPROACHING MARRIAGE- Mrs. Ray E. Fields. Also, there will be two
Slusser of Chelsea, Mich., is amouncing the engagement and full-length features : "The
approaching marriage of her daughter, Denise Diana, to Ted Phantom of the Opera" and
Fortner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse .Fortner of Rt. 1, Oak Hill. The· "The Hunchback of Notre
bride-elect is a 1971 graduate of Chelsea High School, and is now Dame"· bo·th starring the
attending Eastern Michigan University. Mr. Fortner is a 1967 fantastic "Man of a Thousand
graduate of Southwestern High School. He served in the armed Faces," Lon Chaney.
The show will begin at 8 p.m.
forces in Vietnam, and is presently employed by the Dana
and
lhe donation for admission
Corporation of Chelsea, Mich. He plans to attend Eastern
is one dollar. Refreshments are
University in the Fall.
. free.
Everyone is invlW&lt;t to attend
the time of Fellowship and the
New Year's Eve Watch Night
Service following the film.

QUEEN
SIZE

SET

OUT WITH THE OLDIN WITH THE NEW!

21 .1ron

~il

•I

N;t':fzling, daughter of Mr. al)d
Mrs. Richard Neutzllng, 496
Lincoln Hill Road, Pomeroy,
has been selecW&lt;J as "Student
of the Quarter" by the faculty
of Mountain State College,
Parkersburg.
'
. Miss Neutzling was selected
for the honor based on attitude,
scholarship, personality and
cooperation. She earned a 4.0
grade average based on a 4.0
scale. She has been presenW&lt;J a
certificate issued by the United
Business School Association, a
copy of which will accompany
her diploma at graduation and
will
be
recorded
at
Waahingtcin, D. C:, designating
her as an · honor student in
business edu~atlon.
-Miss Neutzling graduaW&lt;I
from the Meigs· High School ln
June, 1972 and enrolled at
Mountain State College In
September.

GAI.IJPOUS - "Christmas superintendents were Mrs .
"'
.:.ve AI Home," a play written Arthur Rupe, Mrs . · Roger
.
. HQOCI, Mrs. Edwt' n Edelblute,
for Sunday
School pupil .·par- ·
Ucipation by Mrs. Wilson Wahl, Miss Hazel HJlley ·
was presenW&lt;I last Wednesday
Mrs. Hood was aiso !he
evening to an ••p.prec18
· ti've pianist for the evening. Pastor
congregation that !illed the Wilson Wahl led lhe opening
First
Baptist
Church Christmas C.rol sung by the
auditorium.
congregation and invocation
The play had its setting in followed by Harry E. Cole,
any Bible teaching church, as a associate pastor. Words· of
· te res.cu
•·• t·n welcome and announcemen'·
Youth
. group was m
"'
knowing how other families were then given by Pastor
and groups honor Christ at Wahl as was the benediction at
the close of the service.
Christmas time. A letter was
written to a Christian
Children 's Home inquiring
about !heir Christmas plans.
The head of the home, Aunt
ASK TO WED
Martha, answered the letter
GALI,IPOLIS - Three
and as the letter was read, ' couples applied for . marriage
various children •s depart- licenses Friday in Probate
ments of !he Baptist Sunday Court.
School appeared and acW&lt;I out
They were Michael E.
the letter by singing Christmas Elliott, 22, Gallipotis, student
carols and quoting many Bible and RebecCa Sue Lakin, 22,
verses relative to Christ's Gallipolis, beautician. Charles
birth, life and death, .plus
several personal testimonies of
what "Christmas means to

SUNDAY
Victory Baptist Church
Youth Fellowship will present
a play, "The Miracle" al7 p.m.
Everyone welcome.

NOW.AT THE ·

ODDS &amp; ENDS

IN APPREqA TION of their efforts for , the good of
Meigs County, Edison Hobstetter, president qf the Pomeroy
National Bank, center, on behalf of the bank presented $100
checks to each of the county's eight fire,departmenbi Thurs-

Pupils ·present play

~'a m::·:·~,·~wo·~~~

A lhought lor the day :
Novelist James Thurber said,
"You might as well fall flat on
your lace as lean over too far
backward."

The play was directed by the
author, Mrs. Wahl, asslsW&lt;J by
Jack Carter, Ughtiog; Luke
Settle and Pastor Wahl, sound;
Mrs. Smeltzer Rose, costumes;
Miss Patty Kinder, scenery,
and Mrs. :;stavaun Matthews
and Mrs. Mohler Marlin,
coaching. The departmental

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

Samuel J . Tilden re·
ceived a majority popular
vote in the 1876 prestdential
election, but wasn't chosen
because he Jacked one elec·
toral vote, due to a dispute
over electoral votes from
four states. Congress then
appointed a special electoral commissIon com.
prised of eight Republicans
and seven Democrats who
selected Ruthe .rford B.
Hayes by a strict party
vote, The World Almanac
notes.

Mar the awHt loy.
of Chriatmaa BU lh1 IIICIIII
of you cmd YDUIJ. now cmd ,,_ _

Department
Store

AND

TO

STORE-WIDE
Keepsake Diamond Solltairtl
The u~imate in beauty .,rtd bri~
llance . .. Keepsake Solitaires,
euantnleed, reil!lered, porlect.

DON'T MISS THIS SALEI
IT'S A BIGGIE 1111

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE
2 COMPLETE FLOORS OF FABRICS &amp;
h-"'TIONS

STORE

·-

342 Second Ave •
Gallipolis, Ohio
,,..,_,._.,.~

.... MtiiJ,....MIII,.._

SIMPLICITY, McCALLS, BUTTE RICK, VOGUE
WE 00 CUSTOM ORESS MAKIN'
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE

PATTERN~

.

'

-·'

51 Court

�the bridc~room, ~rved as best
man, and \he other attendants .
• were Tommy Pope, Rt. I,
Patriot, Rusty Hutchins, Rt. 2,
Patriot and Dale Haney,
Columbus.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mr8. Pope wore a white crepe
dress with long silver vest and
matching accessories. Mrs.
Haney was in brown, tr~
with white, and wore matching
accessories. Their corsages
were brown carnations tied
with yellow and orange ribbon.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the social
roo.m or the church immediately following the
ceremony. The bride's table
was coveroo with a lace cover .
.over yellow on which were
placed arrangements . or
flowers to carry out the color
scheme. In the center oi the
table, was a lovely ti~ree-tiered
cake topped with a miniature
bride and groom replica. Mrs.
Joyce Haney, sister-in-law of
· the groom, registered the
guests. Mrs . Jennifer Ours,
KATHLEEN "PENNY" SKIDMORE
Miss - Carla Wagoner, Mrs.
GALUPOUS
- BETROTHAL ANNOUNCED - Mr. and
Mary Beth Coleman, and Mrs.
Lavonna Miller presided at the Mrs. Warren Skidmore, Evergr*n, are announcing the
·engagement of their daughter, Kathleen Marie, to Robert Lee
table.
For a short wedding trip to Ratliff, son of Mt. and Mrs. Jac)&lt; Ratliff, Vinton. The bnde'elect
the Smoky Mountains in isasenloratGaltia Academy High School and plans to attend the
Gatlinburg, Tenn., the new Holzer School of Nursing in September. Mr. Ratliff is a 1971
.Mrs. Haney changed into a graduate of North Galtia High Sc~l !l"d is employed at Bob
brown and white checked Evans Sausage Plant. Wedding vows w1ll be exchanged at Saint
jacket and brown slacks and Louis Catholic Church in late summer.
wore the corsage of roses from
her bridal bouquet. The couple
1\. T
RECUPERATING
is now at home to their many
1
Oliver Stover is recuperating
frienas on the Cora-Rodney
6 '
at his home following cataract
Road, Rt. 2, Galtipolis.
COLUMBUS _ Ohio State surgery. His address is Royal
Tbe
bride
is
a
1970
graduate
'
University has issued a list ol Oak Garden, Bradenton, Fla.
of
Southwestern
High
School
CADMUS - In a beautiful, father of one Dr her friends and
and the ·Gallipolis Business seniors and graduate students
double ring ceremony, on which she wore In her shOe.
who received degrees at its
Sunday, Oct. 8, 1972 at 2:30
Miss Kim Pope, sister of. the College. She is presently autumn commencement.
p.m. at the .Calvary Baptist bride, was the matron of honor. employed at the Haskins- Inauguration of Dr. Harold L.
Church, Rio Grande, Miss . She was attired · in a floor Tanner Clothiers Company as Enarson as the university's
.
Lena Mae Pope and Darrell length gown of two-toned a bookkeeper.
The bridegroom is also a 1970 ninth president tooll. place
· Haney exchanged wedding brown silk chiffon, styled with
during the ceremonies held
vows.
· candlelight bodice, detailed graduate of Southwestern High Dec. 15 In St. John Arena.
The bride is the daughter of with ribbon .run through Venise School and is presently em·
Graduates included: Luanna
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pope, lace, and softly gathered skirt. played al the Bob Evans Mcintosh, Cheshire, bachelor
Cadmus, and the bridegroom t.s She wore a matching bouffant Sausage Plant, Bidwell.
Out-of-town guests attending of science in education ;
the son of Mr. aitd Mrs. RIIS!M:ll veiled headpiece with velvet
Richard J. Miller, Gallipolis,
Haney, Rt. 2, Patriot. The Rev. scatter bows, ,anct carried a were: · Mrs. Ron Silvers and bachelor of science in buSiness .
Gerald Brown and the Rev. bouquet of brown, yellow, and Tina, Pataskala, Ohio;•Mr. and administration; Reyman D.
Mrs. Charles Musselman ,
Damon Staplelim officiated at orange accents.
Miss
Barb White,. Gallipolis, ha~helor of
the wedding.
Miss Taml Pope Served her Columbus;
arts; Charles H. Knight, .
The main altar of the church sister as junior bridesmaid and Williams, Portsmou!IJ; Carl Pomeroy, master of business
was beautifully arranged with was attired in a floor length Wooten, Westervllle, Ohlo 1 administration ; Patrick R.
large qaakets of mums, gown .of two-tone gold silk Mrs . Marjorie Marcum, .Story, Pomeroy, bachelor of
chry11111themums, and d•i•ies chiffon, to match that of her Orient, Ohio; Mrs. Eloise arts and Petricia Price Jordan,
in the fall colors of the wedding sister. Her veil was also ac- Farmer, Chicago, Dl.; Mr. and Portland,
of arts.
and on either side of the cented ·\vith matching velvet Mrs. J.;tmes Williams and
communion table were live- · bows and she carried a bouquet children, Xenia, Ohio; Mrs.
bra11,cb cande)f~ras , Im- .9,f brown, yel_lo .i!lt4 ·OtJIIIge, Ceylon Frey and grand' SON 1BORN' • '
da"4)lters and 'Mr.'·and Mrs.\
mediately down, and in front of accents. .
Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Alli!tf ,.l
the .t~lon table, was an
Miss Redith Bosler, Thur- Edgar Wooten, Westerville,
arrlnlement of three In- man, and Miss Penny McNeal, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond ,are annowiclng the birth of
dlvldual' Cllldles placed in a Rt. 4, Oak Hill, were her at- Mann and Mrs. Vernie Mann, their second ~on , Joseph Lee,
. row. These were to have tendanl.s. They were attired In Cleveland; Mr. and,Mrs. Bill at Holzer Medical Center Dec.
special significance in the flcxx; length gowns of two-tone Rexer and Patton, Columbus; 21, at 8:45 a.m. Joseph is
ceremony wllen the bride and tangerine and moss green silk Miss Connie Wood, Kettering, welcomed by a two-year ·old
groom went to the altar and, chiffon, styled identical to the Ohio ; Mr. and Mu. Delbert .brother, Gary Wayne, Jr.
taking the two lighted candles, matron of honor, and wore Beekman, Washington Court Maternal grandparents are
together they lighted the single veils accented with matching House; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Pope Mr. and Mrs. Otis A. Johnson,
Crown City, and paternal
candle and extinguished the velvet 'bows and carried and Botf and Miss Judi Ware,
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Columbus;
an~ Mr, and Mrs.
two burning candles; thus, bouquets of brown, yellow, and
Ray Justice, Todd and Eric, Mervin Roach of Ravenswood,
stgrilfylng their lives united as o,range accents.
W. Va,
one. White satin bOws, msrklng
Delbert Haney, brother of Columbus.
the family pews, completed the
~~~~~~~~~
decorating decor .
Miss Dawna Jo Walker ,
Thurman, presented one-half
hour of organ music which
included the following numbers, "Whither Thou Goest,"
"Oh Promise Me," "I Love
You 'l'ruly," "Misty, One Hand

Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Haney-

-

Herbs make nice
Christmas gifts
BY ELIZABETH PHILLIPS .
GALLIPOLIS - There is a
magic in herbs. Rosemary is
called The Christmas Herb,
and this" fragrant, evergreen
plant makes a most ap.
ptopriale Christmas gift.

....-•REAL ESTATE FOR SALE-.~Seal~d bids o~ the following described properties will be acce~ted at

the executive offices of the Holzer Foundation, 385 ~a~kso~hP•k:~~~
or before January 10, 1973. You may bid on aII parce 5 og~ erd ron
of them separately, or any combin~tion. The Holzer . oun ~ 1 to
reserves the righllo reject any or all btds. Keys and appom:me~ s ,
view the properties may be arranged by callmg Robert anmng s
office at ~~6-5152 .

Modern 3 bedroom horne. nice !&lt;itchen and bath, hardwood floors,
utility roorn , 9arage, small. flat landscaped lot.
· · ··

650 First Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
Older frame home includes 6 rooms ali~ ba,th, ju~t 21/2 blocks from
city park, aluminum siding, flat lot 26 x86 10112 ·
.

652 and 660 First Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
Vacant lot

54'x86: lOlf2".

Rear 11 _S pruce • First Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio .
Vacant lot

43' 5"x87' .

15 Spruce Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
Vacant lot

. uThat's for remembran ce ' 1

,.,.
!,.
I

114 Vinton Court, Gallipolis, Ohio

iii

0
,.,.
m
IIIII
Ut

~·

48.5'x173' 10" .

Warehouse (concrete block) 7056 sq. feet in exce ll ~nt cond:tion and
perfeclloce~tion with ample parking. L·shaped lot W1th 4JW frontage
on First Avenue.

_.._. . . REAL ESTATE FOR SALE _ _ _..

For A Better Job,
Sooner-Go To

Business College
Several career courses
ovalloblt. All are approved
lor Ytltrons.

Wrltt .,.call ~~6- 4367 tl.r fret

ca~log

of caur~s and nul

sfartltot date.

Gallipolis
Business Callege

Spend rfhose

Food Dollars
RealisticaIIy .

MAGAZINE
.. RACK .

''
I

L?..

J

,.

;

1

Georg~

Merry Christmas and

POLLY'S POINTERS

fiUed with special moments to be enjoyed with the folks you love.

OHIO .VALLEY BA.NK

CHRISTMAS DAY
I

MONDAY, DECEMBER 25th .
SO OUR EMPLOYEES MAY SPEND THE HOLIDAY
WITH THEIR FAMILIES.

OPEN FOR BUSINESS AS USUAL
TUESDAY DECEMBER 26

~ ~~1s

OFFICERS DIRECTORS, AND EMPLOYEES
Joy Ba-rlow
Pamela Bates
Phyllis Berkley
Charlene . Bla'k
Madge Boggs
Redilh Boster
Georgia Boyer
Keith Brandeberry
Arlene Briggs
W. Lewis Brown
Connie Burchell
Delsie Burgess
J. A. Burton
Dorothy Byus

'
Marion Ca !dwell

Raymond Casey
Brenda Cremeens
Carroll Curry
James L. Dailey
Donna Dowler
Emerson E. Evans
William Fadeley
Cathy Fovargue
Elaine Gray
Li!lda Haner
Morris E. Haskins
e&gt; Mary Howell
~

Robert Lane
urry E. l.ee

'

Ginny Longley
Kathryn Massie
Beep Matthews
John McNeill
Billy Jo Meadows.
Frank H. Mills, Jr.
Concetta Mitchell
Julia Mullins
Jeanne Ours
Jennifer Ours
Sandra Peck
Sharon Pugh
Louise Rece
Thelma Rtes
.Georgl1 Richie

Shirley Robie
John P. Rock
C. Leon Saunders
Elsie Saunders
Wendell B. Thomas
Marva Turley
Wilma Webster
Shelia Whaley
Selwyn R. White
Phyllis Wilc~xon
Ernest N. Wiseman

J

'

I

I

1
I

Gift?

RESTOCK

MENS
TlES

12PRICE

OFF ANY ITEM
IN OUR
GIFT DEPARTMENT

-----------------------We Will Be Open m
9:00 TonHe

After Ouistmas Our
Stcn Hours WiD Be
10:00 to 6:00 Weekdays,
Sunday 1:00 to 5:00

u.s.

· - ·. ·

.

. ·

DEAR POLLY- I have successfully used saddle soap
lo remove water spots on my saddle, caused by ram •. and
suggest that M. M. try this on he_r belt. Follow dt.rections ·on the soap wrapper and use 1t tp clean all leather
goods.-D. B.
DEAR POLLY-On the inside door of the glove com·
partment in our car I have taped (on three sides l a sn:tal!
piece of firm cardboard with our (husband an~ .w•fe .
names, address. our daughier's name (to be notified In
case of art accident) her address and phone number. In
the open end of the cardboard I slipped oUr car Insurance
card so it 11 at one's fingertips "!hen needed.-ANGEUNE
DEAR POLLY-Place a buttcm. about the size of a
' quatter and !hat has four holel in it, on .top of your pin
cusbion. Stick in four needles of different sl~s ; one
throueh each hole. You'll find how mucb eas•er and
quicker it Is to find a nee&lt;.lle of the right alze when you
are In a hurry.-MRS, E. S.
DEAR POLLY-Have you ever used regular paper
lowell as guest hand towels? Unexpected guests found me
wltll my lowell unlroned. I folded le'leral of the lowell
from my kitchen roll that bad an attractive border.
Folded in bait tile tone way and hanging on the towel
raelt IIIey leok~ Uu frubl,y preued towels-AGNES

We Will Close
Sunda~ ·Evening
December 24th

Price

MENS POLYESTER

SPORT
COATS

tuesday, Dec. 26th

All Sales Final!
Bring Him In _.

At 11 AM

i4nppr

Wishln&amp; you and
yours thevery
best of holidays!

Gallipolis, Ohio

..
'.

Awav

Our Regular $36.95 Va

And Will Reopen

t~akt

Floor Balcony)

C. P.O.
PLAID
SHIRTS

ALL
LUGGAGE

.

a~···

A

$ 66

Happy NeiD Year To All

•i

I

.6 PM

THE FINAL DAY OF THIS FANTASTIC OFFER

Smeltzer Garden Center

our n,eighbors and friend s this.wish- a blessed Yule,

'

CLOSED

TO

"DURAL" E'LECTRIC SCISSORS

.

l\ODAY
.

12

1 PM

MENS
ROBES

s"·" gg'

~ember~

1n the spirit of the season we bestow on all,

TO

GALLIPOLIS
Mrs . Wesley Lee McCaUa, Mlcllel
Blanche McCalla was honored . McCalla, Mr. l\0([ Mrs. Char~
with a bi~thday party oh _her (Lynn) Mays and daughter, ·
80th birthday, Nov. 14 at her Mitzy, Gallipolis; Mrs. Mike
son's home. Hostesses for the .(Ann ) Johnson and daughters
day were Mrs. Frank McCalla Shane, and Beth Ann, Bidwell.
and two of Blanche'S
All left with love and best
daughters, Lois and Muriel.
wishes for Mrs. McCalla and
The table was decorated with wished her many more healthy
a bouquet or carnations and her years. .
many gifts. . A nice birthday
Another daughter (Mary),
cake and iced tea were served Mr. and Mrs. John Galbriat!i ·
and at noon a bountiful dinner from Lexington, Ky., visited
was served.
her mother. on Saturday and
Children present were Mr. presented her with a gift ·
and Mrs. Frank McCalla 'and
John McCalla, Gallipolis;
Edna
from
· Everett,
Washington; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth (Lois) Wallen ; Mr.
and Mrs. Kerr (Muriel) Myers
and Eddie Myers, Orient,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Willis
(Joy) Fanning, Circleville;
grandchildren present were
Richard "Dick" McCalla,
DAN THOMAS
- - - - - · -- - In 1949, the still ·popular
At-.i"D SoN
· Christmas song "Rudolp~, the
11 Ser'vill9 you slncel936"
Rednosed Reindeer" first swept
, Gallipolis. Olllo
the country.

AT

By

lEN

Mrs,
Blanche McCalla
.. .
has 80th anniversary

according to Shakespeare, but
I
·folklore also suggests a sprig of
REAL HOLDUP
Rosemary under your bed will
~YRACUSE, N. Y. (UPI) set you up for a night of
A bandit held up a branch of
dreamless sleep. It has also the m~tfragrantandde~c•ous the Merchants National Bank
been sugg!!$ted that if you're ofall the herbs. But BI!Stl has Friday and escaPed with about
cra!l\llllng for an exam, stick a many ·facets. .In Italy 11 IS $18 000. Ali he fled with two
Ni&lt;;WJ.,Y INST ALrED OFFICERs OF TiiE GRACE UNITED METijODIST WSCS ARE
'
sprig of ROsemary behind your · dedicated to lovers ; in Greece, bank
offiCials in pursuit, the
. plcturedabo~ewiththe Rev.PaulHawkswhoservedas the installing officer. .
ear and it will pep up your It is an emblem of hatred ; in gunman dropped his pistol .
memory.
Africa, It is considered an Police said the pistol was made
Ro~mary is a half-hardy antidote to a scorpion's sting. It
of plastic.
European perennial herb. Its is also believed to be good for
f&lt;
/-1
dark green needle-like leaves the heart and at the entrances •
resemble those of a fir. The to the lell)pies in India, pots of
SALES RISE
plant has a ri_ch scent. To Basi\growbythedoors. Itis
COALVILLE, England
J J
J
perfume an entire room, just believed the herb will ensure (UI'I) - Sales of conbrush a. branch with a warm children to those who desire traceptives have risen 300 pet.
hand. For a handsome them and wiU opeo the gates of ,
GALUPOUS ·- lnstaUation ' Mrs.- Dovel Myers, Mrs.!liram
.
Christmas table tree, it needs heaven to the pious, Howev.er, since the Family Plannin~ .
of offlcers highlighted \he Stutes, Mrs. Wayne Davis and
By GAYNOR MADDOX
no ornaments, just a handsome In Europe, they say,·one must Association, a birth control
general meeting · of the Mrs. Norml\0 Stewart, and
1972 was the year of con. container 'will be enough. To curse when planting Basil, or it advioo agency, displayed In Its
Women's Society of Christian Mrs. Howard Neal.
tinuing upward food prices. - keep tlui plant in good con- won't come up. Basil sprinkled !toni window a Christmas tree
Service of Grace United
President Mrs . Howell 1973, unfortunately, looks dillon, be Sure the soil is well on fresh sliced tomatoes with a decorated with contraceptives.
Methodist Church held in :the Edwards conducted a brief about the sam.e. So what new drained and not allowed to dry little olive oil and vinegar; Is
Cha I De 20 M · H 11
Sh
ways of feedmg the family
·
.
ta t
pe
c. . rs. owe business meeting.
e an- has the American home- out. Rosemary 1s rarely very s y.
Edwards, president, opened nounced there will be five maker discovered to offset bothered by pests but the herb Sage is the herb of Jupiter
the meeting with a reading general meetings during 1973 this trend ?
does need a light, cool shower which has been used in Greece
"Gift of GilLs."
with the next ·meeting to be
Let's question two women, once a week. Spray early on a and Rome from early times for '
The Agape Youth Choir of the Jan. 17. The Society voted to highly placed in business and clear day so it dries by night. seasoning rich meat. Sage tea
Grace Church, under the donate $150 to the Gallia with families to feed
After Jbe ·holidays, return the was drunk as a bewerage on the
direction of Mrs, Paul Hawks County Emergency Fund, a · Anita Fial, graduate' of plant to a sunny (south or continent and in England
and Alan Kemp, presented service greatly appreciated .Cornell's prestigious school southwest) window. Keep it before the 17th century.
selections of Christmas music. and needed in the cominunity of home economics and now away from artifical heat: If the
Tarragon is another familiar
The newIy organ i..,..
-·• group, and to send $150 ov~r and above large
directorfood
for public
J,ewis Neale,
·
k"ltchen herb. It is said to
relationsa ground doesn't freeze durmg
with accompanist Judy Kemp, the yearly pledge to the Athens concern. has a family of four winter; it will, keep In , a tub sweeten · the breath. It
POINT PLEASANT
sang "A Child of Hope," solot.si District for missions.
and they like to eat well. ·
outdoors. Use the branch tips propagates only . by root
LouieGriffln; "CouldThisBea . Mrs. Edwards thanked the
" I buy every meat possible asseasoning,freshordried,all divisions, so if you have a
Special Night," soloist Alan members for the privilege of in gigantic lots - the largest year long. Rosemary is a friend who grows Tarragon,
Kemp, and "No Golden serving as president of the turkey, the larg~st brisket, graceful plant, with upward beg, buy, or steal a root
Carriage," soloist Rita Societyandexpressedherwish . for example .. You would be curving branches. This spicy- division.
Valentine.
to Mrs. Earl Durham, the new surprised at the cost savings leaved plant has become a
The list of herbs is much
on large quantities ," she
Thir!y-seven · memb~rs president, for a very rewarding says. " I paid $!·.99 for. half a traditional decoration in longer but these are common
Witnessed the lnstallmg year to come. For devotions, brisket. But for a whole bns- England.
ones which can be grown on
cerfmony, conducted · by the Mrs . Keith Thomas read . ket the cost runs between
sweet Marjoram Is another your kitchen window sill and I
Rev. Paul Hawks. Mrs. am Joe "Spirt! · of Christmas" by $1.29 and $1.39 a pound."
of&lt; ihe " previous herbs" don't know of a nicer or more
Johnson read"John )j:5-9 and HenryVanDykeandclosedthe
When she arrives home brought to America by the lasting Christmas gift for a
presented the painting and meeting with prayer.
With the purchase she cooks early settlers. Its name means friend who enjays cooking. In
S3.98
• washing
. the feet
- of the
An organizational meeting
pieceentrre
of turkey
meat or
she ent1re
ha s "joy of the mountain," and in the summer, they can be set
story of Christ
of Peter and the other each circle followed In the purchased. She serves some ancient Greece and· Rome, out In the garden and seeing
disciples. Each officer then dining room. Circle No. 4 was for dinner and what is left newly marriect couples were them In the early morning,
received the towel of humility hostess for the evening. Tbe she freezes in ~rtions and crowned with wreaths or when the sun Is touching the
Folding Wood
They All Gol
and service given by Rev. dining room was decorated in serves another lime. Actual- Marjoram. Jzaac Walton ad- dew on the leaves, and
'
· talled of• keepmg
. w1th
. the Chri.stma
ly shetime
alsoin-cuts
downand,
on vacated usmg
. Marjoram
, when sm elllng
the
enticing
· ~awks. Newly ~
. s work
this way
fleers are: pre:udent, Mrs. ~ason. Everyone was mvtled of course, on money spent.
cooking fish and he was so fragrances, will convince you
Earl Durham; ·vice-president, for refreshments of punch and
There are ·five or six ways 1 right. Parsley, which is also an that "To grow herbs is to
Mrs. James Gilliam ; honorary cookies served from a know of to serve frozen tur- herb ,and a delicious one, has soothe the soul and Invite good
.,
vi*·P••ot, M,ra. Pa\11 bea~lil.l1 aj)polntecl !nJI!et ,, key. Also. my family love~ msny superstitions regarding 'ortune." ' '
H ks; secretary, Mrs. Hiram lable which carried out the rpeat sauces. So the butcher it.s p1anling and raising. It's
· ·
Mrs . ChriStmas
·.
gives me
good buy
f1ve conside red '--d
St11tes: treasurer,
season th erne.
pounds
of aground
meat.onThen
... 1uc k 1o transCiuirles Webster; missionary
1 make the meat sauce all at plant it (and I wonder about GORILLAS REMEMBERED
While
education, Mrs. Howell Edonce divide it into meal-size this since my father gave me
SEATI'LE,I Wash. (UP!) They
. wards; spiritual growth, Mrs.
pardons and freeze in · the msny starts from his garden in Santa Claus won1t forget four
·Last
Keith Thomas; Chrisitan social
individual contamers so only Tiffin, which never grew _for young goriUas at Woodland
elations Mrs. Silas Hamilton·
ELLIS AT L&amp;IEUNE
the needed a~ount must be me). It's also considered bad Park. They'D have a special
hip, Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT - Marine thawed. It· IS remarkably luck to give It away. In other
party Christmas afternoon at
Grace; lac a! church respon- PVt. Daniel R. Ellis, son of Mr. good," Anita Flal states.
words to get It you·must steal
which they will be given
slblliUes, Mrs. Everette Me- and Mrs. Ple!ant A. Ellis of 713
1972 was a big year for lt. It's best to plant it on Good wrapped packages containing .
A $5.95 VALUE!
Mahon; publicity, Mrs: Don s. FoUrth St., Middleport, has label reading too.
Friday and thus fool the Devil
their favorite foods. The
.
"I
have
always
been
a
1
t
Moore; hospitality, Mrs. Arden reported for duty at the Marme label reader ..Now 1 am more and preferab y a pregnan packages wlU be all •he&lt;l to a
Small lot to sell : so be early!
Dobson; historian, Mrs. 0. L. Corps Ba~, Camp Lejeune, N. so. 1 look at the list or in· woman has good suc~ss In fir tree In the zoo's great ape
Has 6 feet of cord, built-In light,
.
White, and Mrs. T. A. ThOmas, C. A 1972 graduate of Meigs gredients carefully and avoid planting it.
house.
guard in lilade to protect table.
chairman of the nominations High ·school, Pomeroy, he those with too many or
1~ to sell.
'
committee. Circle chairmen joined the Marine Corps in meaningless ingredients. I
are Mrs. William P. Smith, August, 1972.
look to simplicity in a prod·
uct. "For example, I sud·
denly realized that the oils
used in bottled salad dress- ,
ing were not so good as pure
cottonseed oil. So I switched.
Simpler, purer and I think
better," she says.
, Marian Tripp, graduate
home
economist from Iowa
Stores Peeve Reader
State College, is now a vicepresident of J . Walter
Thompson advertising pub'Rushing' Seasons
.lic relations firm in their
Chicago office. She has two
By POLLY CRAMER
(2nd
young sons.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with department
She sees nothing to indi·
stores that rush all the seasons. Our local shops had "End cate any permanent lowering
of Season" sales the last week in June. One might as well of food prices. She points out
forget about shopping for clothes to t~ke on a vacation as
we have sold off much of our
Womens Cotton
wlater coats replace summer clothes tn June. By the time farm surpluses and there is
one gets around to shopping for .back-to-s~hool clothes
no lessening in labor costs.
only heavy winter things are avatlable-~mgs that are
transportation costs and the
much too heavy to wear in the classro~ms m September. cost of hauling • in farm
Our local stores began putting out _ Chrts~as displays m crops.
October and loudspeakers blare out Chrtstmas carols. In
Marian Tripp, who spends
mid-November. No wonder so many folks are shoppmg
her day among food manu4 Mles West of G~lpofis
from mail-order catalogs.-MRS. C. B.
. facturers, pleads for a life
of more sanity in 1973.
.~
a
:a:iLa'll Polly's Problem •~iiiililrll_ _ _llllllii
0!1
35
It
Is
time
for
hOmemakers
DEAR POLLY -We have a lovely cork lamp. It
A store · cleanup I
to take another look at how
has faded through the years. What can we put on th1s
Flight bago, 111ft olde
they s~nd their food dollar.
$3.98 VALUES!
typu, canvas or
to make the cork look pretty agam? Smce retirevinyl totes.
. ment we have lived in a lakeside house that has
smelled musty from the beginning. Scrubbing with
disinfectant and even painting have not stop!!!d the
musty "smell. I do hope some of the readers will have
Take$
some advice.- MARGE
Them

Ua· w· Ls· t'nsta.ll.s
Rev. 11•
·c oifficer.·"
new TITcc_
vv

mastez:.

-One Heart," ''ATime for Us,''
•'Because,'' ''Oh Per£ect Love''
and the traditional wedding
march.
Given in marriage In ber
father, tbe lovely bride was
attired In a floor length prlnceu gown of silk pe~u de sore,
styles with a VIctorian
neckline, filled bodloo, long
sleeves, and A·line llklrt, with
wide chapel train. Venlse }ace
detailed the neckline, gown
iron!, and sleeves. A Veplse
appliquee! camelot headpiece
secured her bouffant veil of
English silk illusion. She wore
a white-gold necklace crosa, a
gift from the groom, and
carried a cascade of white
glads, yellow dajJies and
orange rosebuds wiUt a white
satin slreamer. For her
"something old," she ·carried a
linen handkerchief which her
Aunt Lena had carried at her .
wedding . Her ' 'something IS;~
borrowed" was an 1852 P.nny
which belonged to the grand-

· To offset ~ drawbacks,
parsley is su~ to have
been a cUre for baldness an? in
1600, a herbal of that t1me
stated that "if Parsl~y seeds
wereslrewne in the ha1re three
times a year - the halre
would not falle out:"
In cooking, parsley is tops,
b11t don't use it juslfor looks. It
really makes a dish taste
wonderful. Sweet basil is ?~e of

CHRISTMAS GIFT
WASHINGTON (UP I)- ~he
urright 'piano on whtclt lrvmg
Berlin composed " White
Christmas" and "Easter
Parade" will be enshrined in
the Smithsonian Institution.
Berlin, 84, announced Friday
that he was giving the scarred
. old mahogany instrument to
the Smithsonian as a Christmas present. ''That!s the
prot/er place for it now thai I'm
no longer writing songs," he
said.
·
·

.

644 First Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

Colle ae vews

Pope-Haney nuptials

•

children. Santa appeared with
Christmas party held by Rio club
a gift for each thllti and a gift
exchange was beld by memRJO GRANDE - The ·Rio Delores Shockey, read a bers.
Grande Mothers (.eague held a Christmas greeti~g from the
Refreshments were
Christmas party Dec. 19 in the state club president. .
arranged by Helen Canaday,
Games were played and Delores Shockey and Sharon
social room or th.e Calvary
Baptist Church. The pre:&lt;ident, songs sung by the members' Mor~an.

•

' '

'

�the bridc~room, ~rved as best
man, and \he other attendants .
• were Tommy Pope, Rt. I,
Patriot, Rusty Hutchins, Rt. 2,
Patriot and Dale Haney,
Columbus.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mr8. Pope wore a white crepe
dress with long silver vest and
matching accessories. Mrs.
Haney was in brown, tr~
with white, and wore matching
accessories. Their corsages
were brown carnations tied
with yellow and orange ribbon.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the social
roo.m or the church immediately following the
ceremony. The bride's table
was coveroo with a lace cover .
.over yellow on which were
placed arrangements . or
flowers to carry out the color
scheme. In the center oi the
table, was a lovely ti~ree-tiered
cake topped with a miniature
bride and groom replica. Mrs.
Joyce Haney, sister-in-law of
· the groom, registered the
guests. Mrs . Jennifer Ours,
KATHLEEN "PENNY" SKIDMORE
Miss - Carla Wagoner, Mrs.
GALUPOUS
- BETROTHAL ANNOUNCED - Mr. and
Mary Beth Coleman, and Mrs.
Lavonna Miller presided at the Mrs. Warren Skidmore, Evergr*n, are announcing the
·engagement of their daughter, Kathleen Marie, to Robert Lee
table.
For a short wedding trip to Ratliff, son of Mt. and Mrs. Jac)&lt; Ratliff, Vinton. The bnde'elect
the Smoky Mountains in isasenloratGaltia Academy High School and plans to attend the
Gatlinburg, Tenn., the new Holzer School of Nursing in September. Mr. Ratliff is a 1971
.Mrs. Haney changed into a graduate of North Galtia High Sc~l !l"d is employed at Bob
brown and white checked Evans Sausage Plant. Wedding vows w1ll be exchanged at Saint
jacket and brown slacks and Louis Catholic Church in late summer.
wore the corsage of roses from
her bridal bouquet. The couple
1\. T
RECUPERATING
is now at home to their many
1
Oliver Stover is recuperating
frienas on the Cora-Rodney
6 '
at his home following cataract
Road, Rt. 2, Galtipolis.
COLUMBUS _ Ohio State surgery. His address is Royal
Tbe
bride
is
a
1970
graduate
'
University has issued a list ol Oak Garden, Bradenton, Fla.
of
Southwestern
High
School
CADMUS - In a beautiful, father of one Dr her friends and
and the ·Gallipolis Business seniors and graduate students
double ring ceremony, on which she wore In her shOe.
who received degrees at its
Sunday, Oct. 8, 1972 at 2:30
Miss Kim Pope, sister of. the College. She is presently autumn commencement.
p.m. at the .Calvary Baptist bride, was the matron of honor. employed at the Haskins- Inauguration of Dr. Harold L.
Church, Rio Grande, Miss . She was attired · in a floor Tanner Clothiers Company as Enarson as the university's
.
Lena Mae Pope and Darrell length gown of two-toned a bookkeeper.
The bridegroom is also a 1970 ninth president tooll. place
· Haney exchanged wedding brown silk chiffon, styled with
during the ceremonies held
vows.
· candlelight bodice, detailed graduate of Southwestern High Dec. 15 In St. John Arena.
The bride is the daughter of with ribbon .run through Venise School and is presently em·
Graduates included: Luanna
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pope, lace, and softly gathered skirt. played al the Bob Evans Mcintosh, Cheshire, bachelor
Cadmus, and the bridegroom t.s She wore a matching bouffant Sausage Plant, Bidwell.
Out-of-town guests attending of science in education ;
the son of Mr. aitd Mrs. RIIS!M:ll veiled headpiece with velvet
Richard J. Miller, Gallipolis,
Haney, Rt. 2, Patriot. The Rev. scatter bows, ,anct carried a were: · Mrs. Ron Silvers and bachelor of science in buSiness .
Gerald Brown and the Rev. bouquet of brown, yellow, and Tina, Pataskala, Ohio;•Mr. and administration; Reyman D.
Mrs. Charles Musselman ,
Damon Staplelim officiated at orange accents.
Miss
Barb White,. Gallipolis, ha~helor of
the wedding.
Miss Taml Pope Served her Columbus;
arts; Charles H. Knight, .
The main altar of the church sister as junior bridesmaid and Williams, Portsmou!IJ; Carl Pomeroy, master of business
was beautifully arranged with was attired in a floor length Wooten, Westervllle, Ohlo 1 administration ; Patrick R.
large qaakets of mums, gown .of two-tone gold silk Mrs . Marjorie Marcum, .Story, Pomeroy, bachelor of
chry11111themums, and d•i•ies chiffon, to match that of her Orient, Ohio; Mrs. Eloise arts and Petricia Price Jordan,
in the fall colors of the wedding sister. Her veil was also ac- Farmer, Chicago, Dl.; Mr. and Portland,
of arts.
and on either side of the cented ·\vith matching velvet Mrs. J.;tmes Williams and
communion table were live- · bows and she carried a bouquet children, Xenia, Ohio; Mrs.
bra11,cb cande)f~ras , Im- .9,f brown, yel_lo .i!lt4 ·OtJIIIge, Ceylon Frey and grand' SON 1BORN' • '
da"4)lters and 'Mr.'·and Mrs.\
mediately down, and in front of accents. .
Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Alli!tf ,.l
the .t~lon table, was an
Miss Redith Bosler, Thur- Edgar Wooten, Westerville,
arrlnlement of three In- man, and Miss Penny McNeal, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond ,are annowiclng the birth of
dlvldual' Cllldles placed in a Rt. 4, Oak Hill, were her at- Mann and Mrs. Vernie Mann, their second ~on , Joseph Lee,
. row. These were to have tendanl.s. They were attired In Cleveland; Mr. and,Mrs. Bill at Holzer Medical Center Dec.
special significance in the flcxx; length gowns of two-tone Rexer and Patton, Columbus; 21, at 8:45 a.m. Joseph is
ceremony wllen the bride and tangerine and moss green silk Miss Connie Wood, Kettering, welcomed by a two-year ·old
groom went to the altar and, chiffon, styled identical to the Ohio ; Mr. and Mu. Delbert .brother, Gary Wayne, Jr.
taking the two lighted candles, matron of honor, and wore Beekman, Washington Court Maternal grandparents are
together they lighted the single veils accented with matching House; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Pope Mr. and Mrs. Otis A. Johnson,
Crown City, and paternal
candle and extinguished the velvet 'bows and carried and Botf and Miss Judi Ware,
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Columbus;
an~ Mr, and Mrs.
two burning candles; thus, bouquets of brown, yellow, and
Ray Justice, Todd and Eric, Mervin Roach of Ravenswood,
stgrilfylng their lives united as o,range accents.
W. Va,
one. White satin bOws, msrklng
Delbert Haney, brother of Columbus.
the family pews, completed the
~~~~~~~~~
decorating decor .
Miss Dawna Jo Walker ,
Thurman, presented one-half
hour of organ music which
included the following numbers, "Whither Thou Goest,"
"Oh Promise Me," "I Love
You 'l'ruly," "Misty, One Hand

Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Haney-

-

Herbs make nice
Christmas gifts
BY ELIZABETH PHILLIPS .
GALLIPOLIS - There is a
magic in herbs. Rosemary is
called The Christmas Herb,
and this" fragrant, evergreen
plant makes a most ap.
ptopriale Christmas gift.

....-•REAL ESTATE FOR SALE-.~Seal~d bids o~ the following described properties will be acce~ted at

the executive offices of the Holzer Foundation, 385 ~a~kso~hP•k:~~~
or before January 10, 1973. You may bid on aII parce 5 og~ erd ron
of them separately, or any combin~tion. The Holzer . oun ~ 1 to
reserves the righllo reject any or all btds. Keys and appom:me~ s ,
view the properties may be arranged by callmg Robert anmng s
office at ~~6-5152 .

Modern 3 bedroom horne. nice !&lt;itchen and bath, hardwood floors,
utility roorn , 9arage, small. flat landscaped lot.
· · ··

650 First Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
Older frame home includes 6 rooms ali~ ba,th, ju~t 21/2 blocks from
city park, aluminum siding, flat lot 26 x86 10112 ·
.

652 and 660 First Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
Vacant lot

54'x86: lOlf2".

Rear 11 _S pruce • First Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio .
Vacant lot

43' 5"x87' .

15 Spruce Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
Vacant lot

. uThat's for remembran ce ' 1

,.,.
!,.
I

114 Vinton Court, Gallipolis, Ohio

iii

0
,.,.
m
IIIII
Ut

~·

48.5'x173' 10" .

Warehouse (concrete block) 7056 sq. feet in exce ll ~nt cond:tion and
perfeclloce~tion with ample parking. L·shaped lot W1th 4JW frontage
on First Avenue.

_.._. . . REAL ESTATE FOR SALE _ _ _..

For A Better Job,
Sooner-Go To

Business College
Several career courses
ovalloblt. All are approved
lor Ytltrons.

Wrltt .,.call ~~6- 4367 tl.r fret

ca~log

of caur~s and nul

sfartltot date.

Gallipolis
Business Callege

Spend rfhose

Food Dollars
RealisticaIIy .

MAGAZINE
.. RACK .

''
I

L?..

J

,.

;

1

Georg~

Merry Christmas and

POLLY'S POINTERS

fiUed with special moments to be enjoyed with the folks you love.

OHIO .VALLEY BA.NK

CHRISTMAS DAY
I

MONDAY, DECEMBER 25th .
SO OUR EMPLOYEES MAY SPEND THE HOLIDAY
WITH THEIR FAMILIES.

OPEN FOR BUSINESS AS USUAL
TUESDAY DECEMBER 26

~ ~~1s

OFFICERS DIRECTORS, AND EMPLOYEES
Joy Ba-rlow
Pamela Bates
Phyllis Berkley
Charlene . Bla'k
Madge Boggs
Redilh Boster
Georgia Boyer
Keith Brandeberry
Arlene Briggs
W. Lewis Brown
Connie Burchell
Delsie Burgess
J. A. Burton
Dorothy Byus

'
Marion Ca !dwell

Raymond Casey
Brenda Cremeens
Carroll Curry
James L. Dailey
Donna Dowler
Emerson E. Evans
William Fadeley
Cathy Fovargue
Elaine Gray
Li!lda Haner
Morris E. Haskins
e&gt; Mary Howell
~

Robert Lane
urry E. l.ee

'

Ginny Longley
Kathryn Massie
Beep Matthews
John McNeill
Billy Jo Meadows.
Frank H. Mills, Jr.
Concetta Mitchell
Julia Mullins
Jeanne Ours
Jennifer Ours
Sandra Peck
Sharon Pugh
Louise Rece
Thelma Rtes
.Georgl1 Richie

Shirley Robie
John P. Rock
C. Leon Saunders
Elsie Saunders
Wendell B. Thomas
Marva Turley
Wilma Webster
Shelia Whaley
Selwyn R. White
Phyllis Wilc~xon
Ernest N. Wiseman

J

'

I

I

1
I

Gift?

RESTOCK

MENS
TlES

12PRICE

OFF ANY ITEM
IN OUR
GIFT DEPARTMENT

-----------------------We Will Be Open m
9:00 TonHe

After Ouistmas Our
Stcn Hours WiD Be
10:00 to 6:00 Weekdays,
Sunday 1:00 to 5:00

u.s.

· - ·. ·

.

. ·

DEAR POLLY- I have successfully used saddle soap
lo remove water spots on my saddle, caused by ram •. and
suggest that M. M. try this on he_r belt. Follow dt.rections ·on the soap wrapper and use 1t tp clean all leather
goods.-D. B.
DEAR POLLY-On the inside door of the glove com·
partment in our car I have taped (on three sides l a sn:tal!
piece of firm cardboard with our (husband an~ .w•fe .
names, address. our daughier's name (to be notified In
case of art accident) her address and phone number. In
the open end of the cardboard I slipped oUr car Insurance
card so it 11 at one's fingertips "!hen needed.-ANGEUNE
DEAR POLLY-Place a buttcm. about the size of a
' quatter and !hat has four holel in it, on .top of your pin
cusbion. Stick in four needles of different sl~s ; one
throueh each hole. You'll find how mucb eas•er and
quicker it Is to find a nee&lt;.lle of the right alze when you
are In a hurry.-MRS, E. S.
DEAR POLLY-Have you ever used regular paper
lowell as guest hand towels? Unexpected guests found me
wltll my lowell unlroned. I folded le'leral of the lowell
from my kitchen roll that bad an attractive border.
Folded in bait tile tone way and hanging on the towel
raelt IIIey leok~ Uu frubl,y preued towels-AGNES

We Will Close
Sunda~ ·Evening
December 24th

Price

MENS POLYESTER

SPORT
COATS

tuesday, Dec. 26th

All Sales Final!
Bring Him In _.

At 11 AM

i4nppr

Wishln&amp; you and
yours thevery
best of holidays!

Gallipolis, Ohio

..
'.

Awav

Our Regular $36.95 Va

And Will Reopen

t~akt

Floor Balcony)

C. P.O.
PLAID
SHIRTS

ALL
LUGGAGE

.

a~···

A

$ 66

Happy NeiD Year To All

•i

I

.6 PM

THE FINAL DAY OF THIS FANTASTIC OFFER

Smeltzer Garden Center

our n,eighbors and friend s this.wish- a blessed Yule,

'

CLOSED

TO

"DURAL" E'LECTRIC SCISSORS

.

l\ODAY
.

12

1 PM

MENS
ROBES

s"·" gg'

~ember~

1n the spirit of the season we bestow on all,

TO

GALLIPOLIS
Mrs . Wesley Lee McCaUa, Mlcllel
Blanche McCalla was honored . McCalla, Mr. l\0([ Mrs. Char~
with a bi~thday party oh _her (Lynn) Mays and daughter, ·
80th birthday, Nov. 14 at her Mitzy, Gallipolis; Mrs. Mike
son's home. Hostesses for the .(Ann ) Johnson and daughters
day were Mrs. Frank McCalla Shane, and Beth Ann, Bidwell.
and two of Blanche'S
All left with love and best
daughters, Lois and Muriel.
wishes for Mrs. McCalla and
The table was decorated with wished her many more healthy
a bouquet or carnations and her years. .
many gifts. . A nice birthday
Another daughter (Mary),
cake and iced tea were served Mr. and Mrs. John Galbriat!i ·
and at noon a bountiful dinner from Lexington, Ky., visited
was served.
her mother. on Saturday and
Children present were Mr. presented her with a gift ·
and Mrs. Frank McCalla 'and
John McCalla, Gallipolis;
Edna
from
· Everett,
Washington; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth (Lois) Wallen ; Mr.
and Mrs. Kerr (Muriel) Myers
and Eddie Myers, Orient,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Willis
(Joy) Fanning, Circleville;
grandchildren present were
Richard "Dick" McCalla,
DAN THOMAS
- - - - - · -- - In 1949, the still ·popular
At-.i"D SoN
· Christmas song "Rudolp~, the
11 Ser'vill9 you slncel936"
Rednosed Reindeer" first swept
, Gallipolis. Olllo
the country.

AT

By

lEN

Mrs,
Blanche McCalla
.. .
has 80th anniversary

according to Shakespeare, but
I
·folklore also suggests a sprig of
REAL HOLDUP
Rosemary under your bed will
~YRACUSE, N. Y. (UPI) set you up for a night of
A bandit held up a branch of
dreamless sleep. It has also the m~tfragrantandde~c•ous the Merchants National Bank
been sugg!!$ted that if you're ofall the herbs. But BI!Stl has Friday and escaPed with about
cra!l\llllng for an exam, stick a many ·facets. .In Italy 11 IS $18 000. Ali he fled with two
Ni&lt;;WJ.,Y INST ALrED OFFICERs OF TiiE GRACE UNITED METijODIST WSCS ARE
'
sprig of ROsemary behind your · dedicated to lovers ; in Greece, bank
offiCials in pursuit, the
. plcturedabo~ewiththe Rev.PaulHawkswhoservedas the installing officer. .
ear and it will pep up your It is an emblem of hatred ; in gunman dropped his pistol .
memory.
Africa, It is considered an Police said the pistol was made
Ro~mary is a half-hardy antidote to a scorpion's sting. It
of plastic.
European perennial herb. Its is also believed to be good for
f&lt;
/-1
dark green needle-like leaves the heart and at the entrances •
resemble those of a fir. The to the lell)pies in India, pots of
SALES RISE
plant has a ri_ch scent. To Basi\growbythedoors. Itis
COALVILLE, England
J J
J
perfume an entire room, just believed the herb will ensure (UI'I) - Sales of conbrush a. branch with a warm children to those who desire traceptives have risen 300 pet.
hand. For a handsome them and wiU opeo the gates of ,
GALUPOUS ·- lnstaUation ' Mrs.- Dovel Myers, Mrs.!liram
.
Christmas table tree, it needs heaven to the pious, Howev.er, since the Family Plannin~ .
of offlcers highlighted \he Stutes, Mrs. Wayne Davis and
By GAYNOR MADDOX
no ornaments, just a handsome In Europe, they say,·one must Association, a birth control
general meeting · of the Mrs. Norml\0 Stewart, and
1972 was the year of con. container 'will be enough. To curse when planting Basil, or it advioo agency, displayed In Its
Women's Society of Christian Mrs. Howard Neal.
tinuing upward food prices. - keep tlui plant in good con- won't come up. Basil sprinkled !toni window a Christmas tree
Service of Grace United
President Mrs . Howell 1973, unfortunately, looks dillon, be Sure the soil is well on fresh sliced tomatoes with a decorated with contraceptives.
Methodist Church held in :the Edwards conducted a brief about the sam.e. So what new drained and not allowed to dry little olive oil and vinegar; Is
Cha I De 20 M · H 11
Sh
ways of feedmg the family
·
.
ta t
pe
c. . rs. owe business meeting.
e an- has the American home- out. Rosemary 1s rarely very s y.
Edwards, president, opened nounced there will be five maker discovered to offset bothered by pests but the herb Sage is the herb of Jupiter
the meeting with a reading general meetings during 1973 this trend ?
does need a light, cool shower which has been used in Greece
"Gift of GilLs."
with the next ·meeting to be
Let's question two women, once a week. Spray early on a and Rome from early times for '
The Agape Youth Choir of the Jan. 17. The Society voted to highly placed in business and clear day so it dries by night. seasoning rich meat. Sage tea
Grace Church, under the donate $150 to the Gallia with families to feed
After Jbe ·holidays, return the was drunk as a bewerage on the
direction of Mrs, Paul Hawks County Emergency Fund, a · Anita Fial, graduate' of plant to a sunny (south or continent and in England
and Alan Kemp, presented service greatly appreciated .Cornell's prestigious school southwest) window. Keep it before the 17th century.
selections of Christmas music. and needed in the cominunity of home economics and now away from artifical heat: If the
Tarragon is another familiar
The newIy organ i..,..
-·• group, and to send $150 ov~r and above large
directorfood
for public
J,ewis Neale,
·
k"ltchen herb. It is said to
relationsa ground doesn't freeze durmg
with accompanist Judy Kemp, the yearly pledge to the Athens concern. has a family of four winter; it will, keep In , a tub sweeten · the breath. It
POINT PLEASANT
sang "A Child of Hope," solot.si District for missions.
and they like to eat well. ·
outdoors. Use the branch tips propagates only . by root
LouieGriffln; "CouldThisBea . Mrs. Edwards thanked the
" I buy every meat possible asseasoning,freshordried,all divisions, so if you have a
Special Night," soloist Alan members for the privilege of in gigantic lots - the largest year long. Rosemary is a friend who grows Tarragon,
Kemp, and "No Golden serving as president of the turkey, the larg~st brisket, graceful plant, with upward beg, buy, or steal a root
Carriage," soloist Rita Societyandexpressedherwish . for example .. You would be curving branches. This spicy- division.
Valentine.
to Mrs. Earl Durham, the new surprised at the cost savings leaved plant has become a
The list of herbs is much
on large quantities ," she
Thir!y-seven · memb~rs president, for a very rewarding says. " I paid $!·.99 for. half a traditional decoration in longer but these are common
Witnessed the lnstallmg year to come. For devotions, brisket. But for a whole bns- England.
ones which can be grown on
cerfmony, conducted · by the Mrs . Keith Thomas read . ket the cost runs between
sweet Marjoram Is another your kitchen window sill and I
Rev. Paul Hawks. Mrs. am Joe "Spirt! · of Christmas" by $1.29 and $1.39 a pound."
of&lt; ihe " previous herbs" don't know of a nicer or more
Johnson read"John )j:5-9 and HenryVanDykeandclosedthe
When she arrives home brought to America by the lasting Christmas gift for a
presented the painting and meeting with prayer.
With the purchase she cooks early settlers. Its name means friend who enjays cooking. In
S3.98
• washing
. the feet
- of the
An organizational meeting
pieceentrre
of turkey
meat or
she ent1re
ha s "joy of the mountain," and in the summer, they can be set
story of Christ
of Peter and the other each circle followed In the purchased. She serves some ancient Greece and· Rome, out In the garden and seeing
disciples. Each officer then dining room. Circle No. 4 was for dinner and what is left newly marriect couples were them In the early morning,
received the towel of humility hostess for the evening. Tbe she freezes in ~rtions and crowned with wreaths or when the sun Is touching the
Folding Wood
They All Gol
and service given by Rev. dining room was decorated in serves another lime. Actual- Marjoram. Jzaac Walton ad- dew on the leaves, and
'
· talled of• keepmg
. w1th
. the Chri.stma
ly shetime
alsoin-cuts
downand,
on vacated usmg
. Marjoram
, when sm elllng
the
enticing
· ~awks. Newly ~
. s work
this way
fleers are: pre:udent, Mrs. ~ason. Everyone was mvtled of course, on money spent.
cooking fish and he was so fragrances, will convince you
Earl Durham; ·vice-president, for refreshments of punch and
There are ·five or six ways 1 right. Parsley, which is also an that "To grow herbs is to
Mrs. James Gilliam ; honorary cookies served from a know of to serve frozen tur- herb ,and a delicious one, has soothe the soul and Invite good
.,
vi*·P••ot, M,ra. Pa\11 bea~lil.l1 aj)polntecl !nJI!et ,, key. Also. my family love~ msny superstitions regarding 'ortune." ' '
H ks; secretary, Mrs. Hiram lable which carried out the rpeat sauces. So the butcher it.s p1anling and raising. It's
· ·
Mrs . ChriStmas
·.
gives me
good buy
f1ve conside red '--d
St11tes: treasurer,
season th erne.
pounds
of aground
meat.onThen
... 1uc k 1o transCiuirles Webster; missionary
1 make the meat sauce all at plant it (and I wonder about GORILLAS REMEMBERED
While
education, Mrs. Howell Edonce divide it into meal-size this since my father gave me
SEATI'LE,I Wash. (UP!) They
. wards; spiritual growth, Mrs.
pardons and freeze in · the msny starts from his garden in Santa Claus won1t forget four
·Last
Keith Thomas; Chrisitan social
individual contamers so only Tiffin, which never grew _for young goriUas at Woodland
elations Mrs. Silas Hamilton·
ELLIS AT L&amp;IEUNE
the needed a~ount must be me). It's also considered bad Park. They'D have a special
hip, Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT - Marine thawed. It· IS remarkably luck to give It away. In other
party Christmas afternoon at
Grace; lac a! church respon- PVt. Daniel R. Ellis, son of Mr. good," Anita Flal states.
words to get It you·must steal
which they will be given
slblliUes, Mrs. Everette Me- and Mrs. Ple!ant A. Ellis of 713
1972 was a big year for lt. It's best to plant it on Good wrapped packages containing .
A $5.95 VALUE!
Mahon; publicity, Mrs: Don s. FoUrth St., Middleport, has label reading too.
Friday and thus fool the Devil
their favorite foods. The
.
"I
have
always
been
a
1
t
Moore; hospitality, Mrs. Arden reported for duty at the Marme label reader ..Now 1 am more and preferab y a pregnan packages wlU be all •he&lt;l to a
Small lot to sell : so be early!
Dobson; historian, Mrs. 0. L. Corps Ba~, Camp Lejeune, N. so. 1 look at the list or in· woman has good suc~ss In fir tree In the zoo's great ape
Has 6 feet of cord, built-In light,
.
White, and Mrs. T. A. ThOmas, C. A 1972 graduate of Meigs gredients carefully and avoid planting it.
house.
guard in lilade to protect table.
chairman of the nominations High ·school, Pomeroy, he those with too many or
1~ to sell.
'
committee. Circle chairmen joined the Marine Corps in meaningless ingredients. I
are Mrs. William P. Smith, August, 1972.
look to simplicity in a prod·
uct. "For example, I sud·
denly realized that the oils
used in bottled salad dress- ,
ing were not so good as pure
cottonseed oil. So I switched.
Simpler, purer and I think
better," she says.
, Marian Tripp, graduate
home
economist from Iowa
Stores Peeve Reader
State College, is now a vicepresident of J . Walter
Thompson advertising pub'Rushing' Seasons
.lic relations firm in their
Chicago office. She has two
By POLLY CRAMER
(2nd
young sons.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with department
She sees nothing to indi·
stores that rush all the seasons. Our local shops had "End cate any permanent lowering
of Season" sales the last week in June. One might as well of food prices. She points out
forget about shopping for clothes to t~ke on a vacation as
we have sold off much of our
Womens Cotton
wlater coats replace summer clothes tn June. By the time farm surpluses and there is
one gets around to shopping for .back-to-s~hool clothes
no lessening in labor costs.
only heavy winter things are avatlable-~mgs that are
transportation costs and the
much too heavy to wear in the classro~ms m September. cost of hauling • in farm
Our local stores began putting out _ Chrts~as displays m crops.
October and loudspeakers blare out Chrtstmas carols. In
Marian Tripp, who spends
mid-November. No wonder so many folks are shoppmg
her day among food manu4 Mles West of G~lpofis
from mail-order catalogs.-MRS. C. B.
. facturers, pleads for a life
of more sanity in 1973.
.~
a
:a:iLa'll Polly's Problem •~iiiililrll_ _ _llllllii
0!1
35
It
Is
time
for
hOmemakers
DEAR POLLY -We have a lovely cork lamp. It
A store · cleanup I
to take another look at how
has faded through the years. What can we put on th1s
Flight bago, 111ft olde
they s~nd their food dollar.
$3.98 VALUES!
typu, canvas or
to make the cork look pretty agam? Smce retirevinyl totes.
. ment we have lived in a lakeside house that has
smelled musty from the beginning. Scrubbing with
disinfectant and even painting have not stop!!!d the
musty "smell. I do hope some of the readers will have
Take$
some advice.- MARGE
Them

Ua· w· Ls· t'nsta.ll.s
Rev. 11•
·c oifficer.·"
new TITcc_
vv

mastez:.

-One Heart," ''ATime for Us,''
•'Because,'' ''Oh Per£ect Love''
and the traditional wedding
march.
Given in marriage In ber
father, tbe lovely bride was
attired In a floor length prlnceu gown of silk pe~u de sore,
styles with a VIctorian
neckline, filled bodloo, long
sleeves, and A·line llklrt, with
wide chapel train. Venlse }ace
detailed the neckline, gown
iron!, and sleeves. A Veplse
appliquee! camelot headpiece
secured her bouffant veil of
English silk illusion. She wore
a white-gold necklace crosa, a
gift from the groom, and
carried a cascade of white
glads, yellow dajJies and
orange rosebuds wiUt a white
satin slreamer. For her
"something old," she ·carried a
linen handkerchief which her
Aunt Lena had carried at her .
wedding . Her ' 'something IS;~
borrowed" was an 1852 P.nny
which belonged to the grand-

· To offset ~ drawbacks,
parsley is su~ to have
been a cUre for baldness an? in
1600, a herbal of that t1me
stated that "if Parsl~y seeds
wereslrewne in the ha1re three
times a year - the halre
would not falle out:"
In cooking, parsley is tops,
b11t don't use it juslfor looks. It
really makes a dish taste
wonderful. Sweet basil is ?~e of

CHRISTMAS GIFT
WASHINGTON (UP I)- ~he
urright 'piano on whtclt lrvmg
Berlin composed " White
Christmas" and "Easter
Parade" will be enshrined in
the Smithsonian Institution.
Berlin, 84, announced Friday
that he was giving the scarred
. old mahogany instrument to
the Smithsonian as a Christmas present. ''That!s the
prot/er place for it now thai I'm
no longer writing songs," he
said.
·
·

.

644 First Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

Colle ae vews

Pope-Haney nuptials

•

children. Santa appeared with
Christmas party held by Rio club
a gift for each thllti and a gift
exchange was beld by memRJO GRANDE - The ·Rio Delores Shockey, read a bers.
Grande Mothers (.eague held a Christmas greeti~g from the
Refreshments were
Christmas party Dec. 19 in the state club president. .
arranged by Helen Canaday,
Games were played and Delores Shockey and Sharon
social room or th.e Calvary
Baptist Church. The pre:&lt;ident, songs sung by the members' Mor~an.

•

' '

'

�Bloodmoh~e

all others.who need blood must
. look to the Red Crolla for their
needs, Mrs. Shaver said.

due Thursday

she
GALLIPOLIS
Mrs.
Thelma Shaver, chairman of
the Gallia County Red Cross
blood program , reported
Satufday the Huntington.
Regiooal Bloodmybile will visit
bere from noon to 6 p.m.
Thursday al the Grace United
Methodist Church. Mrs. Shaver
asked, "Would you give the gilt

of me to someone this manufacture vital enzymes In
Christmas?" The Red Cr06S the blood, or wben illness
gives life, hope and happiness disrupts the proper functioning
all year through its blood of the circulatory system; a
program.
lransfer of whqle blood or blood
Blood is needed to sustain life · component is needed. The cllild
when a large amount is lost, with 4eukemia, the ~n heart
wben something goes wrong surgery patient, shock or'burn
with thJ! body's ability to victim or accident victim and

added the Red CrO&amp;S

must depend on volunteer
donors. Because of an Increase
in population and the Increased
uses of blood, new dOIICII'IIIIIIISt
give blood to meet the demand.
Ufe and hope will continue if
the regular donora and
newcomers continue to give to
the blood program, sbe said.

INJUNCTION REFUSED .
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Packers.
U.S. District Court Judge
Although the contest will not
Joseph C. Waddy refused be carried by the CBS affiliate
Friday to grant an iiijunction In Washington, WTOp, the
requested by three Washington game ·Will be televised by a
Redsklns fans to revoke the Baltimore station, which 5ome
National Football League TVsets in the nation's capital
television blackout of Sunday's · .can receive. Wad~y used this
. playoff game between the. reason in denying the comRedskin~ and the Green Bay . plaint.

· ATIEND!Nl} HOCKEY GAME IN (X)LUMBUS Members of The Wiseman Agency Midget Foot!&gt;all League
team, 1972 Gallipolis MFL champions, attended a
professional hockey game in Columbus Friday night. The

.

team, its cheerleaders and coaches were taken to Columbus
in the Rio Grande COllege bus. Before leaving Gallipolis,
f1)embers·were presented individual trophies for wi!lning the ·
city crmrn, and the co,achesreceived plaques for their outstanding efforts quring the 1972 campaign.
ROOKIES HONORED
NEW YORK (UP!) - Two
Cincinnati Bengals and one
Cleveland Brown were named
today to the United Press International 1972 National
Football League All-Rookie
Team.
Sherman
White ,
the
defensive end who was Ute
second player drafted in tlie
college draft last January, was
chosen along wiUt team!nate
Tommy Casanova, chosen at
safety.
T0t11 Darden, also at safety,
was chosen from Cleveland. He ·
was the Browns' No. I draftee.
White was the Bengals' first
draft choice and Casanova
· their second.

,.
'

f

l'

PRICED $3
,

FROM

4995 .

[ELITTON

Paul &amp; Madge Northup, Ow'nm Pt Pleasant,

Microwave Ovens

Nobody knows more about mlcrow11.ve cooklrig than Litton. Nobody.

·· K&amp;K Mobile Homes

Foreman .&amp; Abbott

w. Va.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

••'

•

.

-~

;

••
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•

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PAYMENT PLAN ·

1
•

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.(

Winter Specials

~

'

: 1Vrs. Darst ·wins Pinto automobile

&gt; ••

lmJ·

,_

Regular Price

SPBeiAL
Pille•

:for

~dlapter.,

.

"'fttll.-lea of attacks on the
meclla represent im
lq 1ceclellted asaault on freedom of the ~en."'
He said the ACLU would
.,_ leglsll(ors to oppose any
MWD•I mo- to curb the
~ of reporters and would
. .~ aupport for a state
...ilure guaranteeing the
liiWI

WRITE US AIOUT
THESE SPECIALS
AND OTHER SPECIALS

J.t··n
'

'~

,.1111

iiHI2!H itl( li~;JJ"l

J·i~.,

.

t

I

1 ! 1!Jhit ~H

J

··-··

THESI PRICES GOOD
ONLY IF ORDERED
BEFORE MARCH 1

$50 down, $25 per month

)

SPBeiAL PRICE

Regular Price

~

kidded her family earlier won the car.
Friday telling them to, "keep
"I almost fell over when the
Ute telephone free" so that she ca;; actually came," Mrs.
could be advised that she had Darst stated.

SP.eiAL
Pille•

S39S

$40 down, $20 per mont~

rights of news media.
Miller Cited a recent speech
by Clay T. Whitehead, White
House telecommunications
director, In which he suggested
local television stations exercise more control over networkoriginated newscasts.
Miller said
Whitehead
"brought
to
fantastic ·
' proportions the onslaught of
government intimidation of the
news media."
The ACLU attorney told a
news conference that if threats
to unhampered news gathering
an~ distribution go unchallenged, "every ·citizen will be
deprlv~ of his right to information, and when that is
gone, all other rights are In
jeopardy."
"Certainly everybody has
the right to criticize the
media," he said. "But It's quite

Starting At

S4Jr0
RIDENOUR

Hospital thanking the society
for lhe birthday party held for
her. It was also announced that
Christmas gifts would be sent
to two patients at Lakin and for
mem~rs to bring them to the
Gilligan signed the revised · He promised his administra- was beautifully decorated by church as soon as possible. A
cr~~l code, bUI al~ough he· lion would have defiriite pro- Anna Johnson' and Roberta bottle cap check in the amount
S31d 1t was .'not without its posals for the next General As- Maynard. Birdie Roush gave of $103.84 was presented to the ·
the invocalion.
society by Birdie Roush.
problems."
8embly.
Following
the
dinner,
the
The program was presented
. "Since many of the provi- ·Also expected from the govmeeting opened with the by Iva Capehart, .her .theme
, SIODS are not effective until ernor's office for tbe next sfs•
"A Missionary's
~anuary of 1974, th~e will be ·sion of the legislature was a singing of "His Way With being
time for further reVIew by law -new bill to ban cognovit holes Thee." Prayer was, given by Calling." Readings were given
enforcement officials, at- and to close loopholes In the Delores Taylor · with the by Anna Johnson "Not Much to
scripture lesson taken from , Give," and Bonnie Fields.
torneys, memb&lt;;rs of the bench consumer credit bill.
and ·citizens,_ and time ·. for . Gilligan said be would allow· Romans 10 given by Rena "Take Me Lord." A· gilt exchange' was )lelH. ·
correCtive act100 should any be · the consumer credit bill to be- Johnson. ·
Stewardship Director , Attending ·were Rev. and
.' ne~SSilry," the gov.e~or said. · \'()me a law without .his signaGilligan said he believe sec- ture. ·
Rebecca Reed, . received the . Mrs. David Fields, Jr., Mr. and
!ions which . allow capi!al He said it was ."not adequate, Penny-a-Day celndars and the Mrs. Clell Wood, Mr. and Mrs.
punishment m certain m- but had some usefiil pro- blessing cups. It was an- Myron Bess, Iva Capehart,
. stances would be tested in visions."
nounced that money instead of Anna Johnson, Roberta
courts as soon as they becante
He said it lu!d failed to ban gifts had been sent to the Home Maynard, Delores·Taylor, Mr.
effective.
.
cognovite notes and had "big Mission in Wounded Knee, and Mrs. George Reed and
The governor S8ld he vetoed loopholes" in the holder-in- South Dakota. Each year the Stacy, Sue Erwin, Lufema
Church of God societies send Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. Birdie
the bill removing special job due-cOur-se sections.
safety protection , lor women
Christmasgiftsormoneyto the · Roush, Bart · Davis ; Larry
because he wanted 'to "see that
Hom~ Missions in the United Roush, Alice Marie Oldaker,
.the state deals with the whole
States.
Lucille Powell, Mr. and Mrs .
problem of job safety for all
A letter was read from a Wilblli' Leifheit, Rena Johnson,
Ohloans, not just one group." ·
patient from Lakin State Bonnie Fields, and Susie Wolfe.
That bill had been opposed
by the Ohio AFL-CIO.
"For years the General
Assembly has refused to pass
effective laws protecting buth
men and women on the job,"
Gilligan said. ''The real impact
NEW HAVEN - The Fields, Nathan Davis, Candy
of this bill is to strip away from
Woman's Missionary Society of Wamsley, Toni Sisk, Shawn
many women not protected by
the New Haven First Church of Fields, Jo Ann Fry, Rodney
God held their annual Prayer Weaver, · Bart Davis , Jeff
Vigil Hour from 9 - 10 a.m. on Weaver, Usa Davis, Jennifer
Saturday, Dec. 16. The theme Weaver, Tim Hysell, Warren
this year is "Follow Ute Star to Fields, Tooy Hysell, Roger
the Stable, Return. Glorifying Weaver, Tracy Hysell, Vicky
The giant panda inhabits
Hysell and Penny Hysell.
the bamboo forests of east- and ·Praising God''.
Around the world and around Adults attending were :
en• Tibet and southwestern
China, living at altitudes the clock for twelve days in- Rebecca Reed, Orpha Fields
'between 6,000 and 14,000 eluding Christmas Day, · Vonna Fry, Delores Taylor:
feet. The World Almanac thousands of Church of God . Eleanor Davis, Grace Hysell,
notes that once it was
thought to subsist solely on people unite In an unbroken Bonnie Fields, Janice Stanley,
bamboo shoots, but it is cham of prayer, Will you join Anna Johnson and Viola
'
' carols were
now known to also feed on us and spend an hour without
Roush. Chrisimas
small animals and flshes.
. Utoughts of your busy holiday also sung by the children.
schedule intruding? The .State
On Sunday, December 24,
of West Virginia has a special children of Ute church school
which was last Saturday.
will present Uteir program
WOMAN JAILED
In other. church activity, a under the direction of the
MASON - Shirley Barker,
Christmas
party was held at teachers. Immediately
3:i, Maso, was arrested by
policeman Sammy Anderson . the church in Ute Missionary following this, a film will be
on a charge of intoxication and Building for the Children's ,shown. The service will begin
was lodged in the Mason Department. Games were at 7 p.m.
County jail. Two IS-year-old played and prizes awarded to
runaway boys, one from each child attending, The cake
Mason and one from walk was won by Roger
COMMERCE secretary tn New Haven, were !liken- Weaver, Refreshments of
Preaidea&amp; Nlxoa'• reshuf- into custody by area cupcakes, sundaes and punch
Oed Cabinet Is Frederick
were served.
B. Dent, textile executive police and later were released
Children attending were
to their parents.
from Spartanburg, S.C.
Penny Wamsley, •Teresa
POMEROY - A gift exWamsley, Brian Fields, Jeff change was a feature of the

held by D. of A

'

Past Councilors
~~~-~'=f1!:U~..-Q"'C"'I::~ Club of Theodorus Council 17,
•
~ Daughters of America, Christ,mas party held this week at the
home of Mrs. Mabel Wolfe.
Preceding the pariy the
group dined at Crow's Steak
House. Poetry, carols, and
games were enjoyed during the
evening, along with a gift
exchange.
·
Attending were Mrs. Carrie
Meinhart, Mrs. Eva Dessauer,
Mrs. Mabel Bearhs, Mrs. Edna
Reibel, Mrs. Eva Robson, MISs
Erna Jesse , Mrs . Kate
Goodwin, and Mrs. Cora
Beegle. Refreshments were
served. Mts. Robson will host
. the ~anuarjo meeting.

NAMED DEPUTY
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Harry
t,t Rosenberg has been named
~ deputy director for the new
human resoiU'ce development
division of the Ohio Depart~ ment of Economic and Community Development.
Rosenberg will be responsible for proViding technical
assistance to the eight Model
Cities and 48 Community
Action Program agencies In
Ohio.

$30 down, $10 per month

We are lowering the prices during
the wint~, giving you th? finest
Steel Engraved Lettering and Carving.We alsa have 50 other
"Winter Specials."

If family name is designed on bac~ of monument, .
' there will be an additional charge of $20.
· The Harley is the finest Barre Vermont 'Granite, 62 inches long and 122 inches high. This
memorial is the companion type engraved with the wild roses around the name panels,
with the polished Italian Marble vase. This vase will display a beautiful bouquel of
flowers. The wings are polished on front and back.

a-------•--·COUPON---------·
I Logon Monumtt)l Company, l'omorD'f, Ohio
0 ....,. 10014 ,. Ftlf! -loto .,.,.... -.iO~ .

I

, ...... ~ hoi color '""' &lt;lito 0114 ,.,... 'it'"".

..... o..-.........,_c..

o~
••lfN•Ni•laliw caft ot My holfte ..
0 Pleaie Wft4 me d.faitt obM Moi"DIIIMM wflhoyt

obll,otlon.

C "-•IMd~on "Winter Special~··.

t.l

I

CONVENIENCE. • ·•• CLOSED
ALL DAY CHRISTMAS.
.
.

Now Bayer, now
Pampers, now
Mlcrin and Midol

· On Colgate,m.
Q-l'q&gt;s,.onEt-La:x:
andNytol

POLAROID
.

Colorpak

108
Reg.· 5.35 -

!Additional lettering and other carvings may be
used on above memorials at 80c per letter. and
· $~5 ·to $45 for carving, exira.)

Convenient Credij Terms• Available-We Cany Our Own Accounts

n Monument CO., Inc.-

Thanks for

Reg.

2.10

2.99
POLAROID TYPE 88
REG. $3.59 2.88

ALL
CHRISTMAS .
CARDS
~ · PRICE
~

'

.2

SUPER
SPECIAL!

KODAK
VP126-12
Black &amp; White

FLASH CUBES
AND

Blenko
Glassware

30%

· · MAGICUBES

~~ 77~·

OFF

FLASH BULBS

Reg.

TYPE M3
FOR POWOID

'

7rf

NOW
...........

~

CX126·12
Color

~

4 Roll Pkg.

66-~

.........,. .....
BOWS

CX126-20
Color ·
Reg.

1.95

Reg. 10'
Each

130
LADIES' COSMETICS

----~

CHANTILLY

EA.

MEN'S TOILETRIES
BRUT

J'

AQUA VELVA

BRITISH STERLING

HAl .KARATE

GRANDE MARQUE

ENGLISH
lEATHER

CHANEL

PUB
BACCHUS

HELENA RUBINSTEIN

MENNEN
OLD SPICE

Sets or
Individual Pieces

PRINCE MATCHABELLL
Men's Pipes and
NEW/CACHET
WE GIFT WRAP FREE!

Tobacco

--• -

BAKER FURNITURE

NEW CABIIIiET member
Claude Brlllt'gar smllu In
Lo1 An~eles al reporter•
Interview him alter he was
appointed Trunspurlatltn
secretary. suecerdlnR John
'Ui!Pt'. lie Is an oil com·
jiiilf~· exeeullve In 1. A.

.. .,.

GIFT WRAP

'

From All Of Us At

150

Reg. '2.35 ,

KODAK

MAX FACTOR

yours beautiful.

.#hl

Black &amp; Wh~e 107

COTY

letting us help make ·

,

POLAROID

means most at home and
·hearthside.

388

~

PRINCE MATCHABELLI

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Chester, 0.

OPEN TODAY 1 P.M. 'TIL 8 P.M~ FOR YOUR SHOPPING

KODAK

· sass

Special prices ilclude lettering, desl&amp;n,
IRd dllirti}IO JIIUr ctmlltl} plot

T.V. &amp;·APPuA.fiCES
GAS SERVICE
985-3307

their · only

All of these monuments have the
EVERLASTING GUARANTEE,
and are from one of the famous quarries of the
Rock of Ages Corporation.

differe'nt to bring government
power down on' the media.
You 're talking about the
biggest power in the country."

Big Screen
ZENITH
Color T.V.

law

.

NEW HAVEN - The
John J. Gilllpn signed the protection against arbitrary
revised criminal code bill Fri- treatment from employers, Women'a Missionary Society
day, but vetoed the measure without dealing in any way · of the New Haven First Church
which !fould have removed Ute Willi the problems faced by of God beld its annual· ChristllpeCial job safety proteCtion . both men and women'employes mas dinner In the Missionary
Buildlng:lfhursday., The· room
. for women.
'in Ohio."

The s.ame' style monument as the Mitchell
at left in length of 42 Inches and. height
of 24 inches, is also In the famous Barre
Vermont granite. , This price is for plain
panels without lhe carving.
.IThe rose and hands carving is $35 extra)

Regular Price

The Mitchell Memorial is the famous Barre Vermont granite, the "Medium of the
Masters", is polished on the front and the back. The top and ends are in the beautiful
natural finish. This companion memorial is in full thickness, ~2 inches high, 52 inches long,
and is engraved wllh the beautiful "Praying .Hands" design along with the wild rosels.

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. federal

Dinner-held

Gift exchange

:.~1 1H{r1~'.) I JO
~fill"' . \•· d ''1

·7

'

S49S

ACL to lobby for 1st right
SAN FRANCISCO (UPB) ,The American avll Liberties
:unton announce(! plans Friday
a lt~ialatlve campaign on
'behalf of reporters' rights and
••to protect the news media
:acatnat 1'govel'lll1tent in:timldltion.''
"We have been forced il)to
•the Incredible lituation where
we mlllll now lobby for the Jst
AIDeDdnMII&amp;," said Jay A.
Mllllr, -Uve director of
lbe
ACLU'I
Northern

~~

11""

..

~ MIDDLEPORt - This
: huge box held thous• ands· of shoppers' entries
~ (at right) seeking to win the
~ 1973 Pinto awarded Friday by
~ Middleport merchants this
year as Uteir annual holiday
: season promotional program.
; Three-year-old David
: Browning, son of Mr. and Mrs.
' Gene Browning, Middleport,
: was given instructions by
;. Middleport Chamber of
: Commerce President, Man; ning Kioes, right, and w&amp;s put
: Into the box to select the
: winner. A minute lllter he
: came up with ~e winning
: tictet, Utat of Mrs. Helen E.
: Darst, 456 Beech St., Mid; dleport. Looking on is Chamber
; of Commerce member, John
, Werner, and another member,
; Gearge Ingels was on hand to
, a!Slst with tbe drawing. Mrs.
Dal'lt was notified of her win
, by telephone and a short time
later received the keys to the
new automobile from Kloes
(above). No purchase was
required for participation in
the program.
Mrs. Darst said wonderingly: "I never won
anything before In my life."
· Premonition or not, she had·

.· "'1'

Gilligan vetoes 1, sighs. IAnntial

Prayer vigil is held

Cook bacon strips in 2 minutes. 4 frczen luncheon
hamburgers in 5 minutes . A beautifu lly browned 4 lb. dinner roasl in 22 minutes. Cook meals in V. the
lime!
You do it all, !hanks lo lhese Lilton firsts: An aulo.rJ1alic defroster that defrosts .16 oz. steak in 4 min.
Easy-clean acryl ic Interior. Plus the largest interior
of any counter-top oven! (Cooks a 20-lb, turkey)
FREE COOKBOOK TOO. Tells everything about
cooking, defrosting, roasti~g. 168 pages. 300 recipes.
Come in for a demonstration I

Litton

0ec:24,1972

WORLD

.

Microwave cooking comes of age with
the practical Litton Minutemaster~

q,ue're singing out our warmest wishes
to you for a Holiday richly rewarding. in good cheer and happiness.

9- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday,

MIDDLEPORT
. Rea;~~~·~:_:~cea"
OPEN EVENINGS
AMIDDLEPoRT tiJLIDAY IIJNANZA MERQINT

�Bloodmoh~e

all others.who need blood must
. look to the Red Crolla for their
needs, Mrs. Shaver said.

due Thursday

she
GALLIPOLIS
Mrs.
Thelma Shaver, chairman of
the Gallia County Red Cross
blood program , reported
Satufday the Huntington.
Regiooal Bloodmybile will visit
bere from noon to 6 p.m.
Thursday al the Grace United
Methodist Church. Mrs. Shaver
asked, "Would you give the gilt

of me to someone this manufacture vital enzymes In
Christmas?" The Red Cr06S the blood, or wben illness
gives life, hope and happiness disrupts the proper functioning
all year through its blood of the circulatory system; a
program.
lransfer of whqle blood or blood
Blood is needed to sustain life · component is needed. The cllild
when a large amount is lost, with 4eukemia, the ~n heart
wben something goes wrong surgery patient, shock or'burn
with thJ! body's ability to victim or accident victim and

added the Red CrO&amp;S

must depend on volunteer
donors. Because of an Increase
in population and the Increased
uses of blood, new dOIICII'IIIIIIISt
give blood to meet the demand.
Ufe and hope will continue if
the regular donora and
newcomers continue to give to
the blood program, sbe said.

INJUNCTION REFUSED .
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Packers.
U.S. District Court Judge
Although the contest will not
Joseph C. Waddy refused be carried by the CBS affiliate
Friday to grant an iiijunction In Washington, WTOp, the
requested by three Washington game ·Will be televised by a
Redsklns fans to revoke the Baltimore station, which 5ome
National Football League TVsets in the nation's capital
television blackout of Sunday's · .can receive. Wad~y used this
. playoff game between the. reason in denying the comRedskin~ and the Green Bay . plaint.

· ATIEND!Nl} HOCKEY GAME IN (X)LUMBUS Members of The Wiseman Agency Midget Foot!&gt;all League
team, 1972 Gallipolis MFL champions, attended a
professional hockey game in Columbus Friday night. The

.

team, its cheerleaders and coaches were taken to Columbus
in the Rio Grande COllege bus. Before leaving Gallipolis,
f1)embers·were presented individual trophies for wi!lning the ·
city crmrn, and the co,achesreceived plaques for their outstanding efforts quring the 1972 campaign.
ROOKIES HONORED
NEW YORK (UP!) - Two
Cincinnati Bengals and one
Cleveland Brown were named
today to the United Press International 1972 National
Football League All-Rookie
Team.
Sherman
White ,
the
defensive end who was Ute
second player drafted in tlie
college draft last January, was
chosen along wiUt team!nate
Tommy Casanova, chosen at
safety.
T0t11 Darden, also at safety,
was chosen from Cleveland. He ·
was the Browns' No. I draftee.
White was the Bengals' first
draft choice and Casanova
· their second.

,.
'

f

l'

PRICED $3
,

FROM

4995 .

[ELITTON

Paul &amp; Madge Northup, Ow'nm Pt Pleasant,

Microwave Ovens

Nobody knows more about mlcrow11.ve cooklrig than Litton. Nobody.

·· K&amp;K Mobile Homes

Foreman .&amp; Abbott

w. Va.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

••'

•

.

-~

;

••
•••
•

USE OUR LOW COST
PAYMENT PLAN ·

1
•

t

.(

Winter Specials

~

'

: 1Vrs. Darst ·wins Pinto automobile

&gt; ••

lmJ·

,_

Regular Price

SPBeiAL
Pille•

:for

~dlapter.,

.

"'fttll.-lea of attacks on the
meclla represent im
lq 1ceclellted asaault on freedom of the ~en."'
He said the ACLU would
.,_ leglsll(ors to oppose any
MWD•I mo- to curb the
~ of reporters and would
. .~ aupport for a state
...ilure guaranteeing the
liiWI

WRITE US AIOUT
THESE SPECIALS
AND OTHER SPECIALS

J.t··n
'

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ONLY IF ORDERED
BEFORE MARCH 1

$50 down, $25 per month

)

SPBeiAL PRICE

Regular Price

~

kidded her family earlier won the car.
Friday telling them to, "keep
"I almost fell over when the
Ute telephone free" so that she ca;; actually came," Mrs.
could be advised that she had Darst stated.

SP.eiAL
Pille•

S39S

$40 down, $20 per mont~

rights of news media.
Miller Cited a recent speech
by Clay T. Whitehead, White
House telecommunications
director, In which he suggested
local television stations exercise more control over networkoriginated newscasts.
Miller said
Whitehead
"brought
to
fantastic ·
' proportions the onslaught of
government intimidation of the
news media."
The ACLU attorney told a
news conference that if threats
to unhampered news gathering
an~ distribution go unchallenged, "every ·citizen will be
deprlv~ of his right to information, and when that is
gone, all other rights are In
jeopardy."
"Certainly everybody has
the right to criticize the
media," he said. "But It's quite

Starting At

S4Jr0
RIDENOUR

Hospital thanking the society
for lhe birthday party held for
her. It was also announced that
Christmas gifts would be sent
to two patients at Lakin and for
mem~rs to bring them to the
Gilligan signed the revised · He promised his administra- was beautifully decorated by church as soon as possible. A
cr~~l code, bUI al~ough he· lion would have defiriite pro- Anna Johnson' and Roberta bottle cap check in the amount
S31d 1t was .'not without its posals for the next General As- Maynard. Birdie Roush gave of $103.84 was presented to the ·
the invocalion.
society by Birdie Roush.
problems."
8embly.
Following
the
dinner,
the
The program was presented
. "Since many of the provi- ·Also expected from the govmeeting opened with the by Iva Capehart, .her .theme
, SIODS are not effective until ernor's office for tbe next sfs•
"A Missionary's
~anuary of 1974, th~e will be ·sion of the legislature was a singing of "His Way With being
time for further reVIew by law -new bill to ban cognovit holes Thee." Prayer was, given by Calling." Readings were given
enforcement officials, at- and to close loopholes In the Delores Taylor · with the by Anna Johnson "Not Much to
scripture lesson taken from , Give," and Bonnie Fields.
torneys, memb&lt;;rs of the bench consumer credit bill.
and ·citizens,_ and time ·. for . Gilligan said be would allow· Romans 10 given by Rena "Take Me Lord." A· gilt exchange' was )lelH. ·
correCtive act100 should any be · the consumer credit bill to be- Johnson. ·
Stewardship Director , Attending ·were Rev. and
.' ne~SSilry," the gov.e~or said. · \'()me a law without .his signaGilligan said he believe sec- ture. ·
Rebecca Reed, . received the . Mrs. David Fields, Jr., Mr. and
!ions which . allow capi!al He said it was ."not adequate, Penny-a-Day celndars and the Mrs. Clell Wood, Mr. and Mrs.
punishment m certain m- but had some usefiil pro- blessing cups. It was an- Myron Bess, Iva Capehart,
. stances would be tested in visions."
nounced that money instead of Anna Johnson, Roberta
courts as soon as they becante
He said it lu!d failed to ban gifts had been sent to the Home Maynard, Delores·Taylor, Mr.
effective.
.
cognovite notes and had "big Mission in Wounded Knee, and Mrs. George Reed and
The governor S8ld he vetoed loopholes" in the holder-in- South Dakota. Each year the Stacy, Sue Erwin, Lufema
Church of God societies send Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. Birdie
the bill removing special job due-cOur-se sections.
safety protection , lor women
Christmasgiftsormoneyto the · Roush, Bart · Davis ; Larry
because he wanted 'to "see that
Hom~ Missions in the United Roush, Alice Marie Oldaker,
.the state deals with the whole
States.
Lucille Powell, Mr. and Mrs .
problem of job safety for all
A letter was read from a Wilblli' Leifheit, Rena Johnson,
Ohloans, not just one group." ·
patient from Lakin State Bonnie Fields, and Susie Wolfe.
That bill had been opposed
by the Ohio AFL-CIO.
"For years the General
Assembly has refused to pass
effective laws protecting buth
men and women on the job,"
Gilligan said. ''The real impact
NEW HAVEN - The Fields, Nathan Davis, Candy
of this bill is to strip away from
Woman's Missionary Society of Wamsley, Toni Sisk, Shawn
many women not protected by
the New Haven First Church of Fields, Jo Ann Fry, Rodney
God held their annual Prayer Weaver, · Bart Davis , Jeff
Vigil Hour from 9 - 10 a.m. on Weaver, Usa Davis, Jennifer
Saturday, Dec. 16. The theme Weaver, Tim Hysell, Warren
this year is "Follow Ute Star to Fields, Tooy Hysell, Roger
the Stable, Return. Glorifying Weaver, Tracy Hysell, Vicky
The giant panda inhabits
Hysell and Penny Hysell.
the bamboo forests of east- and ·Praising God''.
Around the world and around Adults attending were :
en• Tibet and southwestern
China, living at altitudes the clock for twelve days in- Rebecca Reed, Orpha Fields
'between 6,000 and 14,000 eluding Christmas Day, · Vonna Fry, Delores Taylor:
feet. The World Almanac thousands of Church of God . Eleanor Davis, Grace Hysell,
notes that once it was
thought to subsist solely on people unite In an unbroken Bonnie Fields, Janice Stanley,
bamboo shoots, but it is cham of prayer, Will you join Anna Johnson and Viola
'
' carols were
now known to also feed on us and spend an hour without
Roush. Chrisimas
small animals and flshes.
. Utoughts of your busy holiday also sung by the children.
schedule intruding? The .State
On Sunday, December 24,
of West Virginia has a special children of Ute church school
which was last Saturday.
will present Uteir program
WOMAN JAILED
In other. church activity, a under the direction of the
MASON - Shirley Barker,
Christmas
party was held at teachers. Immediately
3:i, Maso, was arrested by
policeman Sammy Anderson . the church in Ute Missionary following this, a film will be
on a charge of intoxication and Building for the Children's ,shown. The service will begin
was lodged in the Mason Department. Games were at 7 p.m.
County jail. Two IS-year-old played and prizes awarded to
runaway boys, one from each child attending, The cake
Mason and one from walk was won by Roger
COMMERCE secretary tn New Haven, were !liken- Weaver, Refreshments of
Preaidea&amp; Nlxoa'• reshuf- into custody by area cupcakes, sundaes and punch
Oed Cabinet Is Frederick
were served.
B. Dent, textile executive police and later were released
Children attending were
to their parents.
from Spartanburg, S.C.
Penny Wamsley, •Teresa
POMEROY - A gift exWamsley, Brian Fields, Jeff change was a feature of the

held by D. of A

'

Past Councilors
~~~-~'=f1!:U~..-Q"'C"'I::~ Club of Theodorus Council 17,
•
~ Daughters of America, Christ,mas party held this week at the
home of Mrs. Mabel Wolfe.
Preceding the pariy the
group dined at Crow's Steak
House. Poetry, carols, and
games were enjoyed during the
evening, along with a gift
exchange.
·
Attending were Mrs. Carrie
Meinhart, Mrs. Eva Dessauer,
Mrs. Mabel Bearhs, Mrs. Edna
Reibel, Mrs. Eva Robson, MISs
Erna Jesse , Mrs . Kate
Goodwin, and Mrs. Cora
Beegle. Refreshments were
served. Mts. Robson will host
. the ~anuarjo meeting.

NAMED DEPUTY
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Harry
t,t Rosenberg has been named
~ deputy director for the new
human resoiU'ce development
division of the Ohio Depart~ ment of Economic and Community Development.
Rosenberg will be responsible for proViding technical
assistance to the eight Model
Cities and 48 Community
Action Program agencies In
Ohio.

$30 down, $10 per month

We are lowering the prices during
the wint~, giving you th? finest
Steel Engraved Lettering and Carving.We alsa have 50 other
"Winter Specials."

If family name is designed on bac~ of monument, .
' there will be an additional charge of $20.
· The Harley is the finest Barre Vermont 'Granite, 62 inches long and 122 inches high. This
memorial is the companion type engraved with the wild roses around the name panels,
with the polished Italian Marble vase. This vase will display a beautiful bouquel of
flowers. The wings are polished on front and back.

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ALL DAY CHRISTMAS.
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Now Bayer, now
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!Additional lettering and other carvings may be
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Convenient Credij Terms• Available-We Cany Our Own Accounts

n Monument CO., Inc.-

Thanks for

Reg.

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PRINCE MATCHABELLL
Men's Pipes and
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BAKER FURNITURE

NEW CABIIIiET member
Claude Brlllt'gar smllu In
Lo1 An~eles al reporter•
Interview him alter he was
appointed Trunspurlatltn
secretary. suecerdlnR John
'Ui!Pt'. lie Is an oil com·
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All of these monuments have the
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NEW HAVEN - The
John J. Gilllpn signed the protection against arbitrary
revised criminal code bill Fri- treatment from employers, Women'a Missionary Society
day, but vetoed the measure without dealing in any way · of the New Haven First Church
which !fould have removed Ute Willi the problems faced by of God beld its annual· ChristllpeCial job safety proteCtion . both men and women'employes mas dinner In the Missionary
Buildlng:lfhursday., The· room
. for women.
'in Ohio."

The s.ame' style monument as the Mitchell
at left in length of 42 Inches and. height
of 24 inches, is also In the famous Barre
Vermont granite. , This price is for plain
panels without lhe carving.
.IThe rose and hands carving is $35 extra)

Regular Price

The Mitchell Memorial is the famous Barre Vermont granite, the "Medium of the
Masters", is polished on the front and the back. The top and ends are in the beautiful
natural finish. This companion memorial is in full thickness, ~2 inches high, 52 inches long,
and is engraved wllh the beautiful "Praying .Hands" design along with the wild rosels.

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. federal

Dinner-held

Gift exchange

:.~1 1H{r1~'.) I JO
~fill"' . \•· d ''1

·7

'

S49S

ACL to lobby for 1st right
SAN FRANCISCO (UPB) ,The American avll Liberties
:unton announce(! plans Friday
a lt~ialatlve campaign on
'behalf of reporters' rights and
••to protect the news media
:acatnat 1'govel'lll1tent in:timldltion.''
"We have been forced il)to
•the Incredible lituation where
we mlllll now lobby for the Jst
AIDeDdnMII&amp;," said Jay A.
Mllllr, -Uve director of
lbe
ACLU'I
Northern

~~

11""

..

~ MIDDLEPORt - This
: huge box held thous• ands· of shoppers' entries
~ (at right) seeking to win the
~ 1973 Pinto awarded Friday by
~ Middleport merchants this
year as Uteir annual holiday
: season promotional program.
; Three-year-old David
: Browning, son of Mr. and Mrs.
' Gene Browning, Middleport,
: was given instructions by
;. Middleport Chamber of
: Commerce President, Man; ning Kioes, right, and w&amp;s put
: Into the box to select the
: winner. A minute lllter he
: came up with ~e winning
: tictet, Utat of Mrs. Helen E.
: Darst, 456 Beech St., Mid; dleport. Looking on is Chamber
; of Commerce member, John
, Werner, and another member,
; Gearge Ingels was on hand to
, a!Slst with tbe drawing. Mrs.
Dal'lt was notified of her win
, by telephone and a short time
later received the keys to the
new automobile from Kloes
(above). No purchase was
required for participation in
the program.
Mrs. Darst said wonderingly: "I never won
anything before In my life."
· Premonition or not, she had·

.· "'1'

Gilligan vetoes 1, sighs. IAnntial

Prayer vigil is held

Cook bacon strips in 2 minutes. 4 frczen luncheon
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q,ue're singing out our warmest wishes
to you for a Holiday richly rewarding. in good cheer and happiness.

9- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday,

MIDDLEPORT
. Rea;~~~·~:_:~cea"
OPEN EVENINGS
AMIDDLEPoRT tiJLIDAY IIJNANZA MERQINT

�Methodist ladies
REEDSVILLE
The
·Reedsville United Methodist
women met with Mrs . Mamie
.Buckley for their Christmas
party, whose home was
beautifully decorated for the
holida,y season . .
J'rayer, Scripture from
Luke, chaptl!r 2, singing of
carols and Christmas readings
preceded a Short business
session conducted by the
president, Mrs. Buckley.
Pledge to missions was paid.
Final plans were made for the

for Christmas party

t

Christmas party at the county
children's home.
A record player and records
were purchased , also in·
dividual gills will be taken to
.the party, for the children.
Games were ·played with
pri~es awarded. Gills were
exchanged beneath a lightl!d
tree. Secret pals' names were
drawn for the coming year.
.Refreshments with at.
tractive Christmas favors were
served to Mrs. May Humphrey,
Mrs. Leona Ruth, Mrs. Verna

Cpuple .wed in War College Chapel

.

Rose, and Mrs. Teddy Mundry, awarded the door prize. A gift
guests, Mrs. Hazel Buckley, will be sent lq a member, Mrs .
Mrs. Rose Thomas, Mrs. Nell Eunice Sprague, a~e 95 years,
Wilson , Mrs. Emma Durst, who is.a patient at the Arcadia
Mrs. Dorotha Reibel, Mrs. Nursing Home at Coolville. The
Vivian Humphrey, Mrs. Ruth .·ne~t meeting will be at the
Dillon · and Mrs. Lillian ·home of 'Mrs. Wilson.
'
Pickens. Mrs . Wilson was

POMEROY - The Army chapel train, ended in a 12-inch
War College Memorial Chapel, · border of lace ruffles, A crown
Carlisle Barracks, Pa., was the of lace flowers and pearls held
scene of the September 30th her elbow . length ve!l of
wed~lng of Jaca Ann Goodwin Illusion .. She carried daisies,
and Daniel James Hussey, roses,
carnations, and
Chaplain Corbin Ketchersid chrysanthemums of white
performed the. dou!&gt;le ring accentl!d by a few fall shades.
ceremony.
Miss Diane Hamilton of
The bride is the daughrer of Elyria, Ohio was the maid of
Mr. and Mrs.. William honor, and Miss ~:!Iizabeth
McKinley Goodwin of Route 3, Spires of New York City
Albany, Ohio.
(formerly of Wilkesvllle, Ohio)
The bridegroom's parents was the bridesmaid. They wore
are Mr. arid Mrs. Robert D. matching floor length diesses
Hussey of Rochester, New of a d~p orange w.hich were
Hampshlre.
accenteq by lace on the bodice
The bride, who was given in and' at the cuffs:
marriage by her father, wore a
The best man was Roger
floor length gown of white peau Dellaire of Rochestet. Ushers
de sole with a wedding ring were the brothers of the bride
collar and lace Inserts at the and groom, John ·Goodwin of
empire bodice and at the cuffs The Plains, Ohio, and John
of the long sleeves. The A-line Hussey, also of Rochestl!r. ·
skirt, which iormed its own

'

Christmas Blessings

Marriage is announced
POMEROY - Mr, and Mrs. Harry E. Cl8rk of Pomeroy
are announcing the approaching inarrlage of their daughter'
Vicki Ann, at left, to Mr. Harold W. Hanson, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold W. Hanson, Sr., Middleport. Miss Clark is a
senior at Meigs High School. Mr. Hanson graduated from
Meigs High School in 1972.
The open church wedding will be an event of Saturday,
Dec, 30 at 6p.m. at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church.
The Rev. Robert Buckley will officiate at the 6 p.m.
ceremony. A reception will be held immediately following
the wedding in thesocialroomgfthe church.

Vicki Ann Clark

,.•

Mr. and·Mrs. Terry Evans

V·

~ Lu Ann French is bride
•
•

0\'J

{bridegroom. The ushers were
Mr. Robert Bratton, Mr. Marc
French, Mr. Dennis Gilkey,
and Mr. Kenny Hartley.
For her daughtl!r's wedding,
Mrs. Rusself wore a powder
blue polyester knit with navy
blue accessories and a red
s9r blue streamf!'s::
rosebud
corsage.
The bridesmaids were Mrs.
Mrs. Evans was in a black
P.&lt;:10rt M. Fox and Miss
Debbie Wisecup. They wore and white print crepe with
blue polyester crepe gowns black accessories and had a
with lace accent on the sleeves white rosebud corsage.
~nd neck and carried one long
A receptJ,on honoring the
stemmed white rose with blue couple was held in the church
streamers. The attendants social room. The three tiered '
wore headpieces to match their wedding cake was topped with
gowns.
wedding bells. Mrs . Steve
Mr. Earl Pat Archer served Henderson registered the
as best man for the guests and presiding at the

:rerry· G. Evans Dec.. 1 7th
•· MIDDLEPORT - ·Baskets of Richard W. Russell. She was
~ white gladioli nanked by seven -attired in a gown of eyelet
·. branch candelabra decorated · embroidered organza with
the altar of the .Middleport basque waist .and bishop
• Heath United Methodist sleeves. The bride wore a
Church for the wedding of Miss Juliet cap with a three tiered
LuAnnFrenchtoMr. Terry G. veil. A sweeping train was
Evans.
attachea to the headpiece.
The bride is the daughtl!r of
She carried a bouquet of red
Mrs. Richard Russell of rosebuds and white mums' and
Middleport and the late Mr. baby's breath fastened to a
Edward T. French, and the white Bible. Her only jewelry
bndegroom iS the son of Mrs. was an antique gold bracelet
Arthur J, Evans of Pomerof belonging to her great·
and the late Mr. Evans. '
grandmother, and worn by her
The wedding was an event of great-grandmother, grandDec. 17 at 3 p.m. with the Rev. mother, and mother on their
Robert T. Bumgarner of. wedding days.
fictating at the double ring
Mrs. Robert Bratton served
ceremony. Nuptial music was as matron of honor. She wore a
p...,.ntl!d by Mrs. Newman Windsor-blue polyester crepe
Burdette.
gown with lace on. the s\eeves
The bride was given In and neck. She earned one long.
marriage by her stepfather, stemmed red rose with Wind-

"

·~

.

!~

She is employed at the Holzer
· Medical Centl!r.
Mrs. Evans, a gradual~ of
Pomeroy High School, is
employed with the Ben Tom
Corporation.
Out-of-town guests were Mr.
and Mrs. John Cunningham
and sons, Gallipolis; Mrs.
James Wildermuth, Miss
Nancy J!uchanan and Jim
Warner, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert M. Fox,
Charleston, s·. c·.

POMEROY - A noon
ceremony at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church in Pomeroy on
Sept. 23 unlred Miss Sandra
Zerkle and Mr. Dennis Carol in
marriage. The R,ev. Bernard
Krajcovic officlatl!d at the
double ring ceremony.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and' Mrs. William Zerkle,
Syracuse, and the bridegroom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Carol of Detroit,
Mich.
·
Mrs. Ele•nor McKelvey was
organist and the vocalist was
Mrs. Irene Hoschar. The music
included "Ave Maria," "Walk
Hand In Hand," "One Hand,
One Heart," "Speak Softly
Love •" uwe •H "and "A Time
Four vases of white car·
nations and six candles were
used on the main altar of the
church, with single candles
being placed &lt;in the side altars.
Given In marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in
a floor length gown of lace over
crepe fashioned with empire
waist, long sheer sleeves with
ruffled lace cuffs accenred with
pearl buttons, and a high collar
with standup lace ruffle. She
carried a colonial bouquet of
white pompons with an orchid
corsage center . Her only
jewelry was a gold watch and
an opal ring, gifts of the groom.
The bride's attendsnts were
Miss Annette
Warner,
Columbus, maid of honor ; Miss
Sandra Carol, Detroit, Mich.,
sister of the groom, bridesmaid; and Miss Jackie Zerkle,
Syracuse, sister of the bride,
junior bridesmaid. They wore
gowns of pink dacron bodices

with long sleeves and empire
waists, with navy blue crepe
skirts accentl!d with large pink
bows at the back·. Their
headpieces were pink trimmed
with blue flowers and had pink
veiling.
The attendants carried pink .
carnations with navy blue star
flowers and long pink colonial.
ribbons to contrast with their
navy skirts.
Mr. Mark.Curtin of Dearborn
Heights, Mich. was best man
for the groom, and the ushers
were Mr. Donn Cover and Mr.
Bill Zerkle, both of Columbus.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Zerkle was •ttired in a
long royal blue polyester knit
dress featuring a high collar
with short slee&lt;es; wtth which
she wore whire patent accessories. Mrs. Carol was in a
long pink crepe gown with pink
bedding accent.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the Meigs
Inn . Music was provided by
Mr. George Hall and Mr. Bob
Schuck.
For a wedding trip to
Daytona Beach, Fla. the bride
changed into a navy blue
(Continued on page 11)

Mayor and Mrs. William Baronick

®

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Each speaker unit has one woofer
projecting Sound down plus one treble

MEIGS
INN

FM radio. Custom Precision record changer.
Cue lever. Tape Input/output and stereo

projecllng sound up. 100-watt peak music

Conlemporory llyled ...,.ntt.
Au1omouc Fino-tuning Control.
C2958W

SATURDAY NIGHT
10 P.M. · 2 A.M.

THE
BURNHAM

The Amber Lounge Opens At 11:00 A.M.

power. Stereo Precision record changer.
Micro-Touch• 2G tone arm. Cue control.

I

headphone jacks. Walnut grained wood .
ve1neer cabinet. Removable
Thermoplastic lid.

SAVEl

SAVEl'

RIDENO R

(Buffet Luncheon 11 : 00 to 1:30, Mond&lt;!Y lhru Saturday)

37 GUEST ROOMS - NEW, MODERN, BY DAY OR WEEK
·PARTY AND BANQUET ROOMS - BY RESERVATION

985-3301

Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Gerlach, Jr. of Rt. 2, Letart, announce the engagement of their oldelt daughter, Jerri Lynn,.
to MarshaU David Riley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Riley,
MaSon, W. Va. Miss Gerlach, a 19'11 graduate of Wahama
High School, attended Glenville State College last year and
presently is under contract to the Women's Anny Corps. Mr.
Riley, also a gracliate of WahamaHlghSchoolclau oll9'11 is
currently serving In the Armed Forces stationed In Frankfurt, Germany .

Social
Calendar
SUNDAY
POMEROY BAPTIST
Church, 7 p.m. Sunday,
Christmas program, climaxed
by a visit from $anta.
THE REGULAR Slinday night
~rvice at the Valley Freewlll
Baptist Church, Poi-ter, will be
held at 7 p.m. Christmas Eve
insread of 7:30p.m.

(We Service What We Sell)
CHESnR,
SEE JIM FOR THE BEST BUYS IN THE BIG BEND AREA.

~

MIDDLEPORT
In·
stallation of new ¢fleers was a
feature of the annual Christmas party of the Twin-City
Shrlnettes held Thursday
evening at the home of Mrs.
Jean Moore.
Mrs. Moore conductl!d the
ceremony' Installing Mrs. Cora
Beegle as president; Mrs.
Violet Miller, vice president;
Mrs. Gertrude · Mitchell,
secretary; Mrs. Beulah Ewing,
treasurer. Welcomed Into
~;:bershlp was Mrs. Irma

LAUREL CLIFF Free
Methodist Church Christmas,
program, Sunday night, 7.:30
p.m., .taking the place of the·
regular evening worship,
· CliRISTMAS Program at,
~ey..,. Holiness 'Church;... 'M ·· M
d h ,
.,,11it::::t..... , l rs.
oore.
opene
t e
r ' ·~:.1'.· m . ) -'- II
"·-dnsonvwo
Publi , nvlted
.
.
mee ng by rea dl ng th e
''"" ay ·
c
·
Christmas Story. Mrs. Mitchell
ANN~AL CHRISTMAS eve had a poem, "Ready · for
candlelight service,_ St. John Christmas". Th'e traveling
Luther1111 Church, Pine Grove, prize donated by Mrs. Walter
Cheater-Racine Road, 8 p. m. Grueser was won by Miss Joy
Sunday. All welcome. .
Kautz, a 8lle&amp;t.
CHRISTMAS EVE can-. Gifts were placed under a
dlellght ~rvlce wlll be held at lightl!d tree. The Moore home
7:30p.m. Sunday at the En·
,
.
U . ted M thodl t was
extensively
and
terpnse n•
. e
s elaborately decorated for the
Church by the choir and the holiday season. The refresh.
Youth Fellowship of the ment table featured a candle
.church. The children wUI have arrangement. Mrs. Ewing
rec1tatlons.
ed the
h d
SERVICES this Sunday at pour
punc an Mrs.
th Fl · t Ba list Church in . Beegle presided at the coffee
e rs
P
service. Mrs. Moore presented
Mason are at 6 p. m. Instead of gifts to Mrl. Emma Clat7:30 P· m.
worthy, Mrs. Marie Hawkins,
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM, Miss Shirley Beegle, Mrs.
United Faith Church, Pomeroy Bonnie Miller, Mrs. Evelyn
• Middleport by-pass, 7:30 Napper, and the above men'
Sunday evening.
tioned.
TUESDAY
THERE WI!J.. NOT be a
meeting of Drew Webster Post
·
39, American Legion, Ladles
Auxiliary, Tueaday· nisht.
·
·
WEDNESDAY
•
hi'T.J.
POMEROY. MIDDLEPORT gJVen C turen
Uons Club, DQOil W~y at
POMEROY - A record
the Meigs Inn.
player, a table for, It, recorda
OHIO VALLEY Com·
and
a record holder were
inandery Knighta Templar,
among the gifts presented to
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temj!le, the Meigs County Chlldren's
Home by the Reedsville
'stated conclave. All Knights
W.S.C.S. at a party there
invitl!d.
.
Thursday night.
Gifts were presented to each
MARRIAGE LICENSES
of
the children and refreshPOMEROY - John Clyde
Ingels, 21, Middleport, and ments of &lt;Cookies, soft drinks,
Karla Rae Kuhn, 19, Pomeroy; and potato chips were served
Wllllam Robert Fetty, 22, from a decoratl!d table. The
Pomeroy, R~ 2, and Beverly women were taken on a tour of
June Bales, 1&amp;, Pomeroy, Rt. the home.
2; Larry Paul Montgomery, 22, ' In the group were Du1ha
Langsville, and Linda Sue Reibel, Mary Humphrey, Mary
Jamison, Vema R01e, Emma
Mldldff, 19, Langsvllle.
Durst, Vivian Humphrey, NeUe
Wilson, Nancy Buckley,
Fra~s Reed, and Mamie
Buckley. Olhlra who Uuted
i'conUnued from page 10)
in providing the gifts were
polyestl!r crepe suit with which Ulllan Picken~, Ruth Dillon,
sbe wore white accessories.
and Graoo Weber.
Mr. and Mrs. Carol reside at
410 Hickory Lane, Apt. ~1.
WesUand, MICh.
The bride attended Ohio
State University lor three

""''!tl·

.

.Carol ···

0.

menial retardation education.
Preeenlly sbe II emploJed u a
dental aulalant lor Dn.
Simon, Jturtla lnd Felhandler.
Mr. ClrGI ........ lnm
Olllo state wltb a i118Jee In
martelill1. He Ia a l8lel
correapondeat far Dtlue
Check Prillten, llelrolt, Mich.

.-

l

Shrinettes .
installation
service held

yean llld will · CERTJFICATES WON
her lftll'k at the Wayne
Slate Unlftf'llty In Jill.
SYRACUSE - Qlarlel H.
Cobb,
Syra-, an Installer
liary. She II Jl!lljorlng In

TV &amp; APPLIANCE·
GAS SERVICE

· LUNCHES .11 A.M. TO 2 P.M., DINNERS 5 TO 10 P.M.

.Wedding plans completed

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel]. Hussey

Class at dinne.r·

POMEROY - Members of
the One-Won.()ne Class of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church
enjoyed a turkey dinner at
Crow's Steak House Thursday
night.
Guests were Mrs. W. A.
Bennett of Mempbla, Tenn.,
mother of Mrs. Oliver Michael,
and David Kuhn, home from
Langley Air Force Base in
Virginia.
Following the dinner the
group W.nt to the church for
Christmas de\rotlons. Mrs .
Mary Shelton read Luke 2 and
the group sang "Silent Night,"
followed by prayer by the Rev.
Robert Kuhn.
Thoughts on Christmas were
.

.

Ca...,.,/s "'"'
r.t1n1u b111 •
. •·v
J
6
,

,

church youth~

•
I
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POMEROY - Youth of the
United Faith Church caroled
one evening at several homes,
the Meigs County Infirmary,
the Veterans Memorial
Hospital and the Meigs County
Children's Home.
In the group were Sharon and
Buddy prake, . Shar.on Hill,
Nancy, Bobble, Kathy and Jo
Ellen Lawrence. They were
accompanied by Mrs. Patty
Hysell and Mrs. Janet Jeffers.
After caroling, they went to the
hune of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Samsel of Mason where they
were joined by Debbie,
Lorinda, Chuck and Tommy
Samsel for a Christmas party
and gift exchange.

given by Mrs. Georgia Watson,
William Watson, George
Skinner, Mrs. Ellen Couch,
Mrs. Harriett Sterrett, Mrs.
Margaret Bailey, Mrs. Eula,
Price, Mrs. Caryl Cook, Mrs.
Burton Smith, the Rev. Mr.
Kuhn, Mrs. Marion Michael,
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner and Mrs.
Maria Foster. Also atoonding
the party was Benny Skinner.
It was . reportl!d that Mrs.
Lewis Stanley is a patient at
the Holzer Medical Center,

POMEROY ..:. Plans have Hall.
been completed for the open
Miss Sheila Folmer of
church wedding of Miss Karia Pomeroy will be the maid of
Rae Kuhn, daughtl!r of the honor and Miss Janelle Kuhn
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Klilm, to
and Miss Robin Kuhn, sisters
Mr. John C. Ingels, son of Dr. of the brid!H!Iect, will be the
and Mrs. Clyde Ingels.
bridesmaids. Flower girl will
The wedding will he an event be Miss Glenda Gum of
of Friday, Dec. 29, at 6:30 p:m. Pomeroy.
at the Pomeroy First
Mr. Donald Michael Mullen
Baptist Church. Organ
of Middleport will serve as best
music beginning at 6 p.m. will man· for Mr. Ingels and the
be pre~ntl!d by Mr. George ushers will be Sgt. David Kuhn,
brother of the brldeo&lt;:lec~ and
Michael Taylor, . Middleport.
Guests wlll be registered by
Room 43S. Members enjoyed a Miss Rita Case!, Middleport.
gift exchange around a .The Rev. Mr. Kuhn will of.
decorated silver tree. Refresh- flclate at his daughter's
ments of red and green salad, wedding. A reception will be
Christmas cookies and coffee held In the church social room
were served from a table
immediately following the
centl!red with a candle.
ceremony.

YEAR END CLEARANCE
ON ALL·· ·

Church class
is entertained

MOTOROLA

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. La~~ce , ManleY, en.
tertalnoo members and friend!
of the Church of Christ In
ChrisUan Union Wednesday
night at their home.
·A covered diSh dinner was
enjoyed. Gifts were exchanged
and games were played.
Attending were Terry
Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Young, Mr. and Mrs. George
Kauff, Mr'. and Mrs. Dale
Shinn, Mrs. Helen Kennedy, ·
Mrs. Myrtle Birchfield,
Elwood Phillips, Mrs. James
Spangler, Darlene, Jimmy,
Davis, and Martie ; Mrs.
Rosemary Hysell, 'Brenda,
Penny, Sherrie, and Julie; Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Manley, Kathy,
Joe and Kevin, Mrs . Iva
Cremeans, Mrs. Lawrence
Manley, Jr., David, Mike, Lisa
and Susan and Mrs. Roxie
Oiler.

.•.

0

coming onto acUve dul)r Ia the
Army he hal alto graduted
from avera! service IChools.
Lt. Hussey served In the New
Hampshire
House
of
Representatives from the 12th
District during the ·1969-70
sesdon. Currently he Is
assistant security officer at the
Army War College.
After a honeymoon at Caneel
Bay Plantation, St. John, US
Virgin Islands., LT and Mrs.
Hussey are residing at 237
Walnut Bot.tom Road, Carlisle,

r-•------.
"'

· _.

Going td A Party? i.''
See Our Selection

PARTY DRESSES '
JUMPSUITS
PANT SUITS

~~

bridegroom graduatl!d
from Spaulding High School,
Rocheater In 1965 and the
University qf New Hampshire
at Durham In 1969 with a ·
Bachelor of Arts Degree In
International Relations. Since

MANY·
ON SALE NOWI

lOLA'S

POMEROY, OH 10 .

1.--•. !"'"•.--~·.1

Open This Sunday. Dec. 24-1 to 6

RADIOS
Reg. 16.95 ...........:•.13.95
Reg. 44.95............ 39.95

Shortwave Radios
Reg. 59.95 ........... 49.95
Reg. Sale
8-Track Tape Player
119.95 99.95
Cassette Players ,
49.95 39.95
STEREO COMPONENTS
Reg $249, Now $195
Reg. $239, Now
$169.95
•

Record Players s20 ·to s30 off
'Great

·auasar.; ·

~

color TV
BIG .SCREEN CONSOLE

At
Bill &amp;

LP REmRDS ·
Reduced '1« ....
With purchase of 4
"" ITIOrt

We

LP'a,

WIIJ Clive you

1 PrM LP
Giblon Amps 101 off

All Guitals 101 off

•488

AND UP

Bill &amp;lee's

R'ID.ENOUR

MUSIC

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
GAS SERVICE

aNIII

111 Second 912.J&amp;IO

915-1107
(We Service Whot Wt Still
CHESTER :
See Jim for the But Buy a in the Big Bend Areo.

Formerlv

BR~

Hdwe.

POMEROY

Record player

Tube, Glare . aan Picture
Face, Customized Tuning,
100
H1ndcnfttd
Chlst&gt;IS.

100,000 BTU Coleman
furnace $299 .oo. 30
ga non glass lined
water heater $69.95.

Jerri Lynn·GeriBch

t.

'

D2004W
The Tampa
Gracefully slim, cabinet

The New

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. '92-3629

May the blessings of Christmas
bless you and your family

'

Wed last summer

for Us."

Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Carol

refreshment table wer:e Miss
Melinda Humphreys, Miss
Debbie Crow, Miss Peggy
Story, Miss Nancy Buchanan,
and Mrs. James Wildermuth.
For a short wedding trip, the
bride changed into a purple
velour pants suit with niat·
ching accessories. The couple
resides at 104 ~ East Main St.,
Pomeroy.
The bride is a graduate of
Meigs lllgh School. and attended Ohio State University.

Our wish for ;you this holiday
season is that your . wish ·be
granted. We pray your prayers
are answered. We hope ·that your
hopes are -realized in the year
ahead.

The reception which im·
mediately followed the
ceremony was held at ·the
Officers' Open Mess at Carlisle
Barracks.
The bride ·graduated from
Albany High School in 1966 and
from Ohio University with a
Bachelor of Science Degree in
Elementary Education in 197Q.
Following graduation from the
Women's Officer Basic Course
at Fort McClellan, Alabama in
1971, she was assigned to the
Army War Cqllege where she is
administrative assistant to the
Chief
of Publlcations, ·
Department of Research and
Studies. Mrs. Hussey formerly
taught In the Alexander School
System at New Marshfield,

repalrmlll, hu rteel~ •
certificate lor CCIIIIpletlna a
coane In u, leleplnle Installation and malnlloanc:e a\
General Telephollt C.. of
01110'1 Plant 'l'rllDIIr&amp; Sdloollll
. . . . C.llalllelllwllb ...
"" r llf ~ ,_., 111 Wlll'b
ID tbe Pwwot 'Vbs...

~~,.
J

0
H
N

F

u

s

T

z

Sale Positively Starts at 8100 A.M.
Tuesday, Dec. 26 and Ends
12 Noon Sat., Dec. 30, 1972

R

E
N
0

L'

Huge Savings • From Our Pockets • To Yours

y
E
A

K

E

SALE • CASH ONLY
Extra Special on Daytona Sport 70 - H70x15 - "Reg Tread". The
White Letters- $20.00. That's Right Only $20.00. What A Buy!

cI .
A
L

Sale On Truck Tires
Take Your Pick
650x16x6 ply All Regular Tread
~70x15x6 'ply
700x 15x6 ply
•

$22 95

Plus Fed. Tax

M
I

p

E

'

ANY DAYTON PASSENGER TIRE IN STOCK
·ANY SIZE • REGUlAR OR
MUD &amp; SNOW. s2295

z
I

R
K
L
E

Special Price
Includes Only
Tires In
Stock

What You Have
Been Waiting For!!

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
HAS DONE IT AGAIN!
700 E. MAIN

Formerly Rizer Oil Co.
PHON I! 992-2101

POMEROY, OHIO

Fed. Excise Tax from Sl.75-S3.57 Per Tire
Tires Priced On Carryout
Add Sl.OO Extra for Mounting ·
Special on 'Balancing with weights 51.50 per tire.

----------~-----------~~-----

,,'

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•

�Methodist ladies
REEDSVILLE
The
·Reedsville United Methodist
women met with Mrs . Mamie
.Buckley for their Christmas
party, whose home was
beautifully decorated for the
holida,y season . .
J'rayer, Scripture from
Luke, chaptl!r 2, singing of
carols and Christmas readings
preceded a Short business
session conducted by the
president, Mrs. Buckley.
Pledge to missions was paid.
Final plans were made for the

for Christmas party

t

Christmas party at the county
children's home.
A record player and records
were purchased , also in·
dividual gills will be taken to
.the party, for the children.
Games were ·played with
pri~es awarded. Gills were
exchanged beneath a lightl!d
tree. Secret pals' names were
drawn for the coming year.
.Refreshments with at.
tractive Christmas favors were
served to Mrs. May Humphrey,
Mrs. Leona Ruth, Mrs. Verna

Cpuple .wed in War College Chapel

.

Rose, and Mrs. Teddy Mundry, awarded the door prize. A gift
guests, Mrs. Hazel Buckley, will be sent lq a member, Mrs .
Mrs. Rose Thomas, Mrs. Nell Eunice Sprague, a~e 95 years,
Wilson , Mrs. Emma Durst, who is.a patient at the Arcadia
Mrs. Dorotha Reibel, Mrs. Nursing Home at Coolville. The
Vivian Humphrey, Mrs. Ruth .·ne~t meeting will be at the
Dillon · and Mrs. Lillian ·home of 'Mrs. Wilson.
'
Pickens. Mrs . Wilson was

POMEROY - The Army chapel train, ended in a 12-inch
War College Memorial Chapel, · border of lace ruffles, A crown
Carlisle Barracks, Pa., was the of lace flowers and pearls held
scene of the September 30th her elbow . length ve!l of
wed~lng of Jaca Ann Goodwin Illusion .. She carried daisies,
and Daniel James Hussey, roses,
carnations, and
Chaplain Corbin Ketchersid chrysanthemums of white
performed the. dou!&gt;le ring accentl!d by a few fall shades.
ceremony.
Miss Diane Hamilton of
The bride is the daughrer of Elyria, Ohio was the maid of
Mr. and Mrs.. William honor, and Miss ~:!Iizabeth
McKinley Goodwin of Route 3, Spires of New York City
Albany, Ohio.
(formerly of Wilkesvllle, Ohio)
The bridegroom's parents was the bridesmaid. They wore
are Mr. arid Mrs. Robert D. matching floor length diesses
Hussey of Rochester, New of a d~p orange w.hich were
Hampshlre.
accenteq by lace on the bodice
The bride, who was given in and' at the cuffs:
marriage by her father, wore a
The best man was Roger
floor length gown of white peau Dellaire of Rochestet. Ushers
de sole with a wedding ring were the brothers of the bride
collar and lace Inserts at the and groom, John ·Goodwin of
empire bodice and at the cuffs The Plains, Ohio, and John
of the long sleeves. The A-line Hussey, also of Rochestl!r. ·
skirt, which iormed its own

'

Christmas Blessings

Marriage is announced
POMEROY - Mr, and Mrs. Harry E. Cl8rk of Pomeroy
are announcing the approaching inarrlage of their daughter'
Vicki Ann, at left, to Mr. Harold W. Hanson, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold W. Hanson, Sr., Middleport. Miss Clark is a
senior at Meigs High School. Mr. Hanson graduated from
Meigs High School in 1972.
The open church wedding will be an event of Saturday,
Dec, 30 at 6p.m. at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church.
The Rev. Robert Buckley will officiate at the 6 p.m.
ceremony. A reception will be held immediately following
the wedding in thesocialroomgfthe church.

Vicki Ann Clark

,.•

Mr. and·Mrs. Terry Evans

V·

~ Lu Ann French is bride
•
•

0\'J

{bridegroom. The ushers were
Mr. Robert Bratton, Mr. Marc
French, Mr. Dennis Gilkey,
and Mr. Kenny Hartley.
For her daughtl!r's wedding,
Mrs. Rusself wore a powder
blue polyester knit with navy
blue accessories and a red
s9r blue streamf!'s::
rosebud
corsage.
The bridesmaids were Mrs.
Mrs. Evans was in a black
P.&lt;:10rt M. Fox and Miss
Debbie Wisecup. They wore and white print crepe with
blue polyester crepe gowns black accessories and had a
with lace accent on the sleeves white rosebud corsage.
~nd neck and carried one long
A receptJ,on honoring the
stemmed white rose with blue couple was held in the church
streamers. The attendants social room. The three tiered '
wore headpieces to match their wedding cake was topped with
gowns.
wedding bells. Mrs . Steve
Mr. Earl Pat Archer served Henderson registered the
as best man for the guests and presiding at the

:rerry· G. Evans Dec.. 1 7th
•· MIDDLEPORT - ·Baskets of Richard W. Russell. She was
~ white gladioli nanked by seven -attired in a gown of eyelet
·. branch candelabra decorated · embroidered organza with
the altar of the .Middleport basque waist .and bishop
• Heath United Methodist sleeves. The bride wore a
Church for the wedding of Miss Juliet cap with a three tiered
LuAnnFrenchtoMr. Terry G. veil. A sweeping train was
Evans.
attachea to the headpiece.
The bride is the daughtl!r of
She carried a bouquet of red
Mrs. Richard Russell of rosebuds and white mums' and
Middleport and the late Mr. baby's breath fastened to a
Edward T. French, and the white Bible. Her only jewelry
bndegroom iS the son of Mrs. was an antique gold bracelet
Arthur J, Evans of Pomerof belonging to her great·
and the late Mr. Evans. '
grandmother, and worn by her
The wedding was an event of great-grandmother, grandDec. 17 at 3 p.m. with the Rev. mother, and mother on their
Robert T. Bumgarner of. wedding days.
fictating at the double ring
Mrs. Robert Bratton served
ceremony. Nuptial music was as matron of honor. She wore a
p...,.ntl!d by Mrs. Newman Windsor-blue polyester crepe
Burdette.
gown with lace on. the s\eeves
The bride was given In and neck. She earned one long.
marriage by her stepfather, stemmed red rose with Wind-

"

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!~

She is employed at the Holzer
· Medical Centl!r.
Mrs. Evans, a gradual~ of
Pomeroy High School, is
employed with the Ben Tom
Corporation.
Out-of-town guests were Mr.
and Mrs. John Cunningham
and sons, Gallipolis; Mrs.
James Wildermuth, Miss
Nancy J!uchanan and Jim
Warner, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert M. Fox,
Charleston, s·. c·.

POMEROY - A noon
ceremony at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church in Pomeroy on
Sept. 23 unlred Miss Sandra
Zerkle and Mr. Dennis Carol in
marriage. The R,ev. Bernard
Krajcovic officlatl!d at the
double ring ceremony.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and' Mrs. William Zerkle,
Syracuse, and the bridegroom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Carol of Detroit,
Mich.
·
Mrs. Ele•nor McKelvey was
organist and the vocalist was
Mrs. Irene Hoschar. The music
included "Ave Maria," "Walk
Hand In Hand," "One Hand,
One Heart," "Speak Softly
Love •" uwe •H "and "A Time
Four vases of white car·
nations and six candles were
used on the main altar of the
church, with single candles
being placed &lt;in the side altars.
Given In marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in
a floor length gown of lace over
crepe fashioned with empire
waist, long sheer sleeves with
ruffled lace cuffs accenred with
pearl buttons, and a high collar
with standup lace ruffle. She
carried a colonial bouquet of
white pompons with an orchid
corsage center . Her only
jewelry was a gold watch and
an opal ring, gifts of the groom.
The bride's attendsnts were
Miss Annette
Warner,
Columbus, maid of honor ; Miss
Sandra Carol, Detroit, Mich.,
sister of the groom, bridesmaid; and Miss Jackie Zerkle,
Syracuse, sister of the bride,
junior bridesmaid. They wore
gowns of pink dacron bodices

with long sleeves and empire
waists, with navy blue crepe
skirts accentl!d with large pink
bows at the back·. Their
headpieces were pink trimmed
with blue flowers and had pink
veiling.
The attendants carried pink .
carnations with navy blue star
flowers and long pink colonial.
ribbons to contrast with their
navy skirts.
Mr. Mark.Curtin of Dearborn
Heights, Mich. was best man
for the groom, and the ushers
were Mr. Donn Cover and Mr.
Bill Zerkle, both of Columbus.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Zerkle was •ttired in a
long royal blue polyester knit
dress featuring a high collar
with short slee&lt;es; wtth which
she wore whire patent accessories. Mrs. Carol was in a
long pink crepe gown with pink
bedding accent.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the Meigs
Inn . Music was provided by
Mr. George Hall and Mr. Bob
Schuck.
For a wedding trip to
Daytona Beach, Fla. the bride
changed into a navy blue
(Continued on page 11)

Mayor and Mrs. William Baronick

®

High Flying Year-End

CLEARANCE SALE
.

.CONTEMPORARY

ffj'~~

·fine-furniture styled

f;ne:lumiture styled

'

.

.'

•tza- ~~

ThtWALDEN
C4511W3 · .$

478

Medium Brown color.

. Kitchen &amp; Bedroom
SUPER CHROMACOLOR
16" Diagonal

Smart cOntemporary styled
console . Chrome 100 Picture

ZENITH

l;ontrol
~omJpact Color T.V.
·emoJe

Modern stvllna A-curved
base adds
Scandia
sophistication!
Chromacolor 100 picture
lube customized luning.

FOR SALE ·

Chase Hardware Co.
Phone992-2511 orm.J91B

037212

$298

The
MILLET

CHROMACOLOR

The
LYNDALE
Portable Compact

$548

ZENITH

ZENITH

Two Speaker PerfOrmance

CALYPSO • CIISW

Tht ECLIPSE • CSUW

40-watt peak musle power. FM / AM/Stereo

Each speaker unit has one woofer
projecting Sound down plus one treble

MEIGS
INN

FM radio. Custom Precision record changer.
Cue lever. Tape Input/output and stereo

projecllng sound up. 100-watt peak music

Conlemporory llyled ...,.ntt.
Au1omouc Fino-tuning Control.
C2958W

SATURDAY NIGHT
10 P.M. · 2 A.M.

THE
BURNHAM

The Amber Lounge Opens At 11:00 A.M.

power. Stereo Precision record changer.
Micro-Touch• 2G tone arm. Cue control.

I

headphone jacks. Walnut grained wood .
ve1neer cabinet. Removable
Thermoplastic lid.

SAVEl

SAVEl'

RIDENO R

(Buffet Luncheon 11 : 00 to 1:30, Mond&lt;!Y lhru Saturday)

37 GUEST ROOMS - NEW, MODERN, BY DAY OR WEEK
·PARTY AND BANQUET ROOMS - BY RESERVATION

985-3301

Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Gerlach, Jr. of Rt. 2, Letart, announce the engagement of their oldelt daughter, Jerri Lynn,.
to MarshaU David Riley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Riley,
MaSon, W. Va. Miss Gerlach, a 19'11 graduate of Wahama
High School, attended Glenville State College last year and
presently is under contract to the Women's Anny Corps. Mr.
Riley, also a gracliate of WahamaHlghSchoolclau oll9'11 is
currently serving In the Armed Forces stationed In Frankfurt, Germany .

Social
Calendar
SUNDAY
POMEROY BAPTIST
Church, 7 p.m. Sunday,
Christmas program, climaxed
by a visit from $anta.
THE REGULAR Slinday night
~rvice at the Valley Freewlll
Baptist Church, Poi-ter, will be
held at 7 p.m. Christmas Eve
insread of 7:30p.m.

(We Service What We Sell)
CHESnR,
SEE JIM FOR THE BEST BUYS IN THE BIG BEND AREA.

~

MIDDLEPORT
In·
stallation of new ¢fleers was a
feature of the annual Christmas party of the Twin-City
Shrlnettes held Thursday
evening at the home of Mrs.
Jean Moore.
Mrs. Moore conductl!d the
ceremony' Installing Mrs. Cora
Beegle as president; Mrs.
Violet Miller, vice president;
Mrs. Gertrude · Mitchell,
secretary; Mrs. Beulah Ewing,
treasurer. Welcomed Into
~;:bershlp was Mrs. Irma

LAUREL CLIFF Free
Methodist Church Christmas,
program, Sunday night, 7.:30
p.m., .taking the place of the·
regular evening worship,
· CliRISTMAS Program at,
~ey..,. Holiness 'Church;... 'M ·· M
d h ,
.,,11it::::t..... , l rs.
oore.
opene
t e
r ' ·~:.1'.· m . ) -'- II
"·-dnsonvwo
Publi , nvlted
.
.
mee ng by rea dl ng th e
''"" ay ·
c
·
Christmas Story. Mrs. Mitchell
ANN~AL CHRISTMAS eve had a poem, "Ready · for
candlelight service,_ St. John Christmas". Th'e traveling
Luther1111 Church, Pine Grove, prize donated by Mrs. Walter
Cheater-Racine Road, 8 p. m. Grueser was won by Miss Joy
Sunday. All welcome. .
Kautz, a 8lle&amp;t.
CHRISTMAS EVE can-. Gifts were placed under a
dlellght ~rvlce wlll be held at lightl!d tree. The Moore home
7:30p.m. Sunday at the En·
,
.
U . ted M thodl t was
extensively
and
terpnse n•
. e
s elaborately decorated for the
Church by the choir and the holiday season. The refresh.
Youth Fellowship of the ment table featured a candle
.church. The children wUI have arrangement. Mrs. Ewing
rec1tatlons.
ed the
h d
SERVICES this Sunday at pour
punc an Mrs.
th Fl · t Ba list Church in . Beegle presided at the coffee
e rs
P
service. Mrs. Moore presented
Mason are at 6 p. m. Instead of gifts to Mrl. Emma Clat7:30 P· m.
worthy, Mrs. Marie Hawkins,
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM, Miss Shirley Beegle, Mrs.
United Faith Church, Pomeroy Bonnie Miller, Mrs. Evelyn
• Middleport by-pass, 7:30 Napper, and the above men'
Sunday evening.
tioned.
TUESDAY
THERE WI!J.. NOT be a
meeting of Drew Webster Post
·
39, American Legion, Ladles
Auxiliary, Tueaday· nisht.
·
·
WEDNESDAY
•
hi'T.J.
POMEROY. MIDDLEPORT gJVen C turen
Uons Club, DQOil W~y at
POMEROY - A record
the Meigs Inn.
player, a table for, It, recorda
OHIO VALLEY Com·
and
a record holder were
inandery Knighta Templar,
among the gifts presented to
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temj!le, the Meigs County Chlldren's
Home by the Reedsville
'stated conclave. All Knights
W.S.C.S. at a party there
invitl!d.
.
Thursday night.
Gifts were presented to each
MARRIAGE LICENSES
of
the children and refreshPOMEROY - John Clyde
Ingels, 21, Middleport, and ments of &lt;Cookies, soft drinks,
Karla Rae Kuhn, 19, Pomeroy; and potato chips were served
Wllllam Robert Fetty, 22, from a decoratl!d table. The
Pomeroy, R~ 2, and Beverly women were taken on a tour of
June Bales, 1&amp;, Pomeroy, Rt. the home.
2; Larry Paul Montgomery, 22, ' In the group were Du1ha
Langsville, and Linda Sue Reibel, Mary Humphrey, Mary
Jamison, Vema R01e, Emma
Mldldff, 19, Langsvllle.
Durst, Vivian Humphrey, NeUe
Wilson, Nancy Buckley,
Fra~s Reed, and Mamie
Buckley. Olhlra who Uuted
i'conUnued from page 10)
in providing the gifts were
polyestl!r crepe suit with which Ulllan Picken~, Ruth Dillon,
sbe wore white accessories.
and Graoo Weber.
Mr. and Mrs. Carol reside at
410 Hickory Lane, Apt. ~1.
WesUand, MICh.
The bride attended Ohio
State University lor three

""''!tl·

.

.Carol ···

0.

menial retardation education.
Preeenlly sbe II emploJed u a
dental aulalant lor Dn.
Simon, Jturtla lnd Felhandler.
Mr. ClrGI ........ lnm
Olllo state wltb a i118Jee In
martelill1. He Ia a l8lel
correapondeat far Dtlue
Check Prillten, llelrolt, Mich.

.-

l

Shrinettes .
installation
service held

yean llld will · CERTJFICATES WON
her lftll'k at the Wayne
Slate Unlftf'llty In Jill.
SYRACUSE - Qlarlel H.
Cobb,
Syra-, an Installer
liary. She II Jl!lljorlng In

TV &amp; APPLIANCE·
GAS SERVICE

· LUNCHES .11 A.M. TO 2 P.M., DINNERS 5 TO 10 P.M.

.Wedding plans completed

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel]. Hussey

Class at dinne.r·

POMEROY - Members of
the One-Won.()ne Class of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church
enjoyed a turkey dinner at
Crow's Steak House Thursday
night.
Guests were Mrs. W. A.
Bennett of Mempbla, Tenn.,
mother of Mrs. Oliver Michael,
and David Kuhn, home from
Langley Air Force Base in
Virginia.
Following the dinner the
group W.nt to the church for
Christmas de\rotlons. Mrs .
Mary Shelton read Luke 2 and
the group sang "Silent Night,"
followed by prayer by the Rev.
Robert Kuhn.
Thoughts on Christmas were
.

.

Ca...,.,/s "'"'
r.t1n1u b111 •
. •·v
J
6
,

,

church youth~

•
I
'

POMEROY - Youth of the
United Faith Church caroled
one evening at several homes,
the Meigs County Infirmary,
the Veterans Memorial
Hospital and the Meigs County
Children's Home.
In the group were Sharon and
Buddy prake, . Shar.on Hill,
Nancy, Bobble, Kathy and Jo
Ellen Lawrence. They were
accompanied by Mrs. Patty
Hysell and Mrs. Janet Jeffers.
After caroling, they went to the
hune of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Samsel of Mason where they
were joined by Debbie,
Lorinda, Chuck and Tommy
Samsel for a Christmas party
and gift exchange.

given by Mrs. Georgia Watson,
William Watson, George
Skinner, Mrs. Ellen Couch,
Mrs. Harriett Sterrett, Mrs.
Margaret Bailey, Mrs. Eula,
Price, Mrs. Caryl Cook, Mrs.
Burton Smith, the Rev. Mr.
Kuhn, Mrs. Marion Michael,
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner and Mrs.
Maria Foster. Also atoonding
the party was Benny Skinner.
It was . reportl!d that Mrs.
Lewis Stanley is a patient at
the Holzer Medical Center,

POMEROY ..:. Plans have Hall.
been completed for the open
Miss Sheila Folmer of
church wedding of Miss Karia Pomeroy will be the maid of
Rae Kuhn, daughtl!r of the honor and Miss Janelle Kuhn
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Klilm, to
and Miss Robin Kuhn, sisters
Mr. John C. Ingels, son of Dr. of the brid!H!Iect, will be the
and Mrs. Clyde Ingels.
bridesmaids. Flower girl will
The wedding will he an event be Miss Glenda Gum of
of Friday, Dec. 29, at 6:30 p:m. Pomeroy.
at the Pomeroy First
Mr. Donald Michael Mullen
Baptist Church. Organ
of Middleport will serve as best
music beginning at 6 p.m. will man· for Mr. Ingels and the
be pre~ntl!d by Mr. George ushers will be Sgt. David Kuhn,
brother of the brldeo&lt;:lec~ and
Michael Taylor, . Middleport.
Guests wlll be registered by
Room 43S. Members enjoyed a Miss Rita Case!, Middleport.
gift exchange around a .The Rev. Mr. Kuhn will of.
decorated silver tree. Refresh- flclate at his daughter's
ments of red and green salad, wedding. A reception will be
Christmas cookies and coffee held In the church social room
were served from a table
immediately following the
centl!red with a candle.
ceremony.

YEAR END CLEARANCE
ON ALL·· ·

Church class
is entertained

MOTOROLA

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. La~~ce , ManleY, en.
tertalnoo members and friend!
of the Church of Christ In
ChrisUan Union Wednesday
night at their home.
·A covered diSh dinner was
enjoyed. Gifts were exchanged
and games were played.
Attending were Terry
Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Young, Mr. and Mrs. George
Kauff, Mr'. and Mrs. Dale
Shinn, Mrs. Helen Kennedy, ·
Mrs. Myrtle Birchfield,
Elwood Phillips, Mrs. James
Spangler, Darlene, Jimmy,
Davis, and Martie ; Mrs.
Rosemary Hysell, 'Brenda,
Penny, Sherrie, and Julie; Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Manley, Kathy,
Joe and Kevin, Mrs . Iva
Cremeans, Mrs. Lawrence
Manley, Jr., David, Mike, Lisa
and Susan and Mrs. Roxie
Oiler.

.•.

0

coming onto acUve dul)r Ia the
Army he hal alto graduted
from avera! service IChools.
Lt. Hussey served In the New
Hampshire
House
of
Representatives from the 12th
District during the ·1969-70
sesdon. Currently he Is
assistant security officer at the
Army War College.
After a honeymoon at Caneel
Bay Plantation, St. John, US
Virgin Islands., LT and Mrs.
Hussey are residing at 237
Walnut Bot.tom Road, Carlisle,

r-•------.
"'

· _.

Going td A Party? i.''
See Our Selection

PARTY DRESSES '
JUMPSUITS
PANT SUITS

~~

bridegroom graduatl!d
from Spaulding High School,
Rocheater In 1965 and the
University qf New Hampshire
at Durham In 1969 with a ·
Bachelor of Arts Degree In
International Relations. Since

MANY·
ON SALE NOWI

lOLA'S

POMEROY, OH 10 .

1.--•. !"'"•.--~·.1

Open This Sunday. Dec. 24-1 to 6

RADIOS
Reg. 16.95 ...........:•.13.95
Reg. 44.95............ 39.95

Shortwave Radios
Reg. 59.95 ........... 49.95
Reg. Sale
8-Track Tape Player
119.95 99.95
Cassette Players ,
49.95 39.95
STEREO COMPONENTS
Reg $249, Now $195
Reg. $239, Now
$169.95
•

Record Players s20 ·to s30 off
'Great

·auasar.; ·

~

color TV
BIG .SCREEN CONSOLE

At
Bill &amp;

LP REmRDS ·
Reduced '1« ....
With purchase of 4
"" ITIOrt

We

LP'a,

WIIJ Clive you

1 PrM LP
Giblon Amps 101 off

All Guitals 101 off

•488

AND UP

Bill &amp;lee's

R'ID.ENOUR

MUSIC

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
GAS SERVICE

aNIII

111 Second 912.J&amp;IO

915-1107
(We Service Whot Wt Still
CHESTER :
See Jim for the But Buy a in the Big Bend Areo.

Formerlv

BR~

Hdwe.

POMEROY

Record player

Tube, Glare . aan Picture
Face, Customized Tuning,
100
H1ndcnfttd
Chlst&gt;IS.

100,000 BTU Coleman
furnace $299 .oo. 30
ga non glass lined
water heater $69.95.

Jerri Lynn·GeriBch

t.

'

D2004W
The Tampa
Gracefully slim, cabinet

The New

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. '92-3629

May the blessings of Christmas
bless you and your family

'

Wed last summer

for Us."

Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Carol

refreshment table wer:e Miss
Melinda Humphreys, Miss
Debbie Crow, Miss Peggy
Story, Miss Nancy Buchanan,
and Mrs. James Wildermuth.
For a short wedding trip, the
bride changed into a purple
velour pants suit with niat·
ching accessories. The couple
resides at 104 ~ East Main St.,
Pomeroy.
The bride is a graduate of
Meigs lllgh School. and attended Ohio State University.

Our wish for ;you this holiday
season is that your . wish ·be
granted. We pray your prayers
are answered. We hope ·that your
hopes are -realized in the year
ahead.

The reception which im·
mediately followed the
ceremony was held at ·the
Officers' Open Mess at Carlisle
Barracks.
The bride ·graduated from
Albany High School in 1966 and
from Ohio University with a
Bachelor of Science Degree in
Elementary Education in 197Q.
Following graduation from the
Women's Officer Basic Course
at Fort McClellan, Alabama in
1971, she was assigned to the
Army War Cqllege where she is
administrative assistant to the
Chief
of Publlcations, ·
Department of Research and
Studies. Mrs. Hussey formerly
taught In the Alexander School
System at New Marshfield,

repalrmlll, hu rteel~ •
certificate lor CCIIIIpletlna a
coane In u, leleplnle Installation and malnlloanc:e a\
General Telephollt C.. of
01110'1 Plant 'l'rllDIIr&amp; Sdloollll
. . . . C.llalllelllwllb ...
"" r llf ~ ,_., 111 Wlll'b
ID tbe Pwwot 'Vbs...

~~,.
J

0
H
N

F

u

s

T

z

Sale Positively Starts at 8100 A.M.
Tuesday, Dec. 26 and Ends
12 Noon Sat., Dec. 30, 1972

R

E
N
0

L'

Huge Savings • From Our Pockets • To Yours

y
E
A

K

E

SALE • CASH ONLY
Extra Special on Daytona Sport 70 - H70x15 - "Reg Tread". The
White Letters- $20.00. That's Right Only $20.00. What A Buy!

cI .
A
L

Sale On Truck Tires
Take Your Pick
650x16x6 ply All Regular Tread
~70x15x6 'ply
700x 15x6 ply
•

$22 95

Plus Fed. Tax

M
I

p

E

'

ANY DAYTON PASSENGER TIRE IN STOCK
·ANY SIZE • REGUlAR OR
MUD &amp; SNOW. s2295

z
I

R
K
L
E

Special Price
Includes Only
Tires In
Stock

What You Have
Been Waiting For!!

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
HAS DONE IT AGAIN!
700 E. MAIN

Formerly Rizer Oil Co.
PHON I! 992-2101

POMEROY, OHIO

Fed. Excise Tax from Sl.75-S3.57 Per Tire
Tires Priced On Carryout
Add Sl.OO Extra for Mounting ·
Special on 'Balancing with weights 51.50 per tire.

----------~-----------~~-----

,,'

•,

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•

�12- .'be

1972

mmunity
Comer By·Charlene Hoeflich

Girl Scout
By
f&gt;iary

Teachers supporting half day kindergarten

i
CHESTER ~ Half-day carols.
· kindergarten was given the
A free wlll offering was
,support of the Eastern Loca.l collected which will be given
District Education Assn. in a half to the Meigs County
meeting Dec. 14 at the Olester Children''s Home and half to
POMEROY - There's no place like home for the holidays,
« E;lementary School.
the Meigs County Community
but unfortunately ; there are many who won't be home for
A Christmas prayer was School. Mrs . Thelma .orr
Membership and world association pins were presented to presented by Mrs . Nellie reported on the Southeastern
Olristmas.
,
members
of the Salisbury Junior Troop 100 at a Chrispnas party Parker; and the Christmas Ohio Education Association
Among those Is Leda Mae Kraeuter, home economics
Wednesday night at the school. ·
teacher at Meigs High School.
·
story was read by Mrs. Donna Convention at Rio Grande.
Mrs. Mary Dorsi presented two year membership pins to. Chadwell. Mr. Charles Wills
Ledil Mae, a patient at tbe Holzer Medical Center for seven
A motion was passed by the
weeks; was ·transferred last week to the Clevelaoo Clinic where Mrs, Nancy Morris, leader, Carol Morris, Camille Swindell, accompanied by Mrs. Lavinia local association to go on
she will be confined indefinitely. Her room number is 3 N 19, so Laura Ohlinger, and Becky Dorst. Girl scout pins went to Mrs. Brannon at the piano led 1he record for supporting half day
Dorst, Gwen Folmer, and Connie Quivey, and all members of the group singing of Christmas kindergarten sessions in the
• send along a card to brighten her days.
'
troop l"!ceived the world association pins and individual gifts '
·
But l..e\18 Mae won't be alone for Olrislmas. Her father,
from Mrs. Dorst.
Eldon Kraeuter, is in Belleview with his son~n.law and daughter,
Songs, reallings and meditations were presented hy the
Dale and Roberta Milidens, and lbe family will have a
troop. Camille Swindell read St. Luke 2, 3-17 and Mrs. Dorst had
celebration in Ledil Mae's room.
·
a poem, "I Took His Hand and Followed," with carol Morris,
Camil)e Swindell, Patty Parker, Paula Swindell and Christi
ANOTHER SHUT -IN to be remembered is Mrs. ~ohn K.
POMEROY - Mrs. Sandra for retarded children byMrs.
Smith of Middleport. Mrs. Smith, confilied to her home for nearly Quivey giving recitation. The closing prayer was by Becky Cobb, Mrs. Helen Blackston, Susan Blaker, Mrs. Cobb, and
.
'
two years, will observe her 88th birthday anniversary next Dorst.
Mrs. Carolyn Grueser were Mrs. Clarice Kennedy.
Refreslunents of cookies, ice cream, soft drinks, and candy
&amp;mday,Dec. 31. Aquiet family party is being planned.
welcomed into.the membership
Mrs . Blaker presented
were served, and the girls exchanged gifts. Atleooing besides
of
the
Middleport
,Child
Condevotions using a Christmas
SUCH HAPPY DAYS this past week at the Meigs Com- those named were Cathy Quivey, Gwen Folmer, Regina Dorst,
servation
LePgue
at
a
meeting
prayer entitled "For Our
munitY Classes for Retarded Children!
and guests, Mrs. Ned Swindell, Paula Swindell, Donald, Delores held Thursday night at the
Children" by Peter Marshall.
Wednesday Miss Sue Woods and Mrs. Erma Yoho came and Cindy Dorst.
home of Mrs . Carolyn Thomas. Mrs. Grueser in welcoming the
loaded with toys for the children. There.·were sluffed clowns, !
· POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 247
Mrs. Susie Grueser presided three new members presented
dogs, liorses, frogs; and teddy bears, and crocheted purses. with
Christmas gifts for their mothers were worked on by
baby dOlls lnstde -one for e~ch of the youngsters, all beautifully members of the junior troop at a meeting Saturday afternoon at at the meeting at which time a each one with a corsage.
report was given on the party
Preceding the gift exchange,
wrapped and tagged. All of tbe toys had been made by Sue and the home of Mrs. Melvin Bonecutter.
staged
Thursday
afternoon
for
the packages were judged and
Mrs. Yoho.
Girls drew names for a gift exchange to take place at a party
the
Meigs
Community
Classes
prizes
were awarded to Mrs.
.
Earlier Flo Martin - ScOttie Simpson conducted a ceramic Saturday afternoon.
.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
workshop for the older children. They provided the greenware
Three
small
Christmas
trees decorated with homemade
vaJOS, thepaintsforthe children to use, and then after they were
ornaments and strings of popcorn and cranberries were.
fired, brought Christmas greenery for each little vase.
delivered to selected residents by patrols of Troop 39 Monday
night following a Christmas dinner party at Heath United
Wll..LIAM WALLACE, IN Holzer for several weeks, has been
Methodist Church.
trarmferred to the V. A. Center, Brown Hospital, 4100 West Third
The girls enjoyed a Kentucky Fried Olicken dinner. A
St., Dayton. Friends here are anxious that he be remembered
rededication and investiture service was conducted for· Tina
with cards during the holiday season.
Shelly, Tammy Blake, and katie Lewis. Agift exchange was held
MR. AND MRS. LAWHENCE MANLEY, Jr. of Middleport and the troop presented gifts to Mrs. Mary Wise, leader, and
Mrs. Margie Slake, assistant.
will celebrate their 13th wedding anniversary on Christmas Day.
Attending the party were Carin Bailey, Julie Byer, Sarah
Congratula ti0111!
Di~dle,
Janell Kelly, Julie Kitchen, Lori Kloes, Terri McDaniel,
It'sa new home this Christmas for Mr. and ~rs . John
Davia wbo formerly resided In ·Middleport. They moved this 'fammy McDaniel, Jo McKinney, Kim Payne, Marianne Welsh,
Debbie 'Zirkle, Terri Zirkle, Ruth Ann Blake, Barbara Thomas,
week Into Oile ~the nice homes builtby Archie Lee at Syracuse.
Angela Payne, Mindy Long, Connie Bailey, Cindy Weaver, Katie
' .ewis1 Tina Shelly, Tammy Blake, and Terri Fox·. Jennifer and
AND WJLI,T'S CHRISTMAS without family get-tog ethers:
. Joinln8 his family for the holidays Is Airman 1.C Benny SUzanna Wise wer.e guests.
MIDDLEPORT CADETIE TROOP 185
Wright who has been sbitio,ned In Tampa, Fla. He has now been
A
gift
exchange
was held at the Chrisimas Party of Troop 185
reassigned to a base near Rapid City, S.D., and will report there
held at the home, of Mrs. Fred Gibbs, leader. Gifts were
after spendlna the bolldaya here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
YOU SAVE 50%
presented to her from the scour and Mrs. Gibbs gave corsages to
lloyd Wright,
each girl.
Oniltmas Eve guests of Mr.and Mrs. Edward Stiles and
Cookies, i&gt;otato chips and sandwiches were served. Favors
daughter, Nina, Middleport, will be Mr. and Mrs. Carl (Kay)
Platter, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. James L. (Barbara) .Fry, were similar to those made for Veterans Memorial Hospital by
the troop. Attending were Joni Murray, Jennifer Wise, Kathy
Ruth Am and Sue Ellen of Pomeroy, Route 3, and Mr. and Mrs.
You get great bargains - Need sinal! last
Raler E. Stiles, Columbus. For Christmas dinner they will be Manley , Trina Gibbs, Virginia Burchett, and Judy Gilkey.
minute items? Save now on sluffed aJ1imals,
jollied by Mrs. Edna Stiles, Pomeroy, Route 3, and Mr. and Mrs.
carded toys, friction cars, battery operated
Henc:hel Nonis and Clarence of Racine, Route 2.
cars, dolls - every toy item in our store goes.
Heme for the halldaya with his parenta Is Bill Zerkle, a law
~ at Oblo State Unlversily. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Carol
(Sancn Zerkle) ~Westland, Mich. are also holiday guests of i~:~::==~~:::;:,~::i:::~::i:::i:!:!:::::::!::::':!_:~::::~:::=~::~:::::::.~:;.~~:;-;:o:;w.
Mr. andMrl. William'Zerkle, daughter, Jackie, of Syracuse.
Mrl. Ava Bellea of Wellston is spending·Clristmas weekend
.t _.. W ,W. ~ llllllr4rHaw, Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman.
'!'lle1 Win join Mrs. June Wickersham and children tor Christmas
1*. dinner.
In Berea for the holiday weekend are Mr. and Mrs. Glenn :\:t
Lambert ~ Middleport. They are spending Christmas with their :?,:
::::
1011.f1Haw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. George DoolitUe, Steven,,
Connie and Kriaty.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Lowery have joined'their son~n-law and
POMEROY - How Christmas times have changed!
daughter, Mr. and ~rs. Edwin Stein and son, Donald Lee, of
My late mother, Mayme Holmes (bless her memory), used
Poca, W.Va. for the celebration ~ Olrlstrnas.
to tell me when a child of the Christmases she experienced as a
Juanita and Carol Bachtel will oliserve Christmas a few days youngster; a far cry from the ones of today.
EVERYDAY 12c
They All Go!
late at the heme 01 Butch and Scottie Bachtel In Pboenlx, Ariz.
There was usually a doll, which was about it. One gift, but
They plan to leave for there the middle of the week and will be
they were always given, an orange and a small amount of candy.
IIIJI'ndlng two weeks.
Of course, they had a tree, but there were no colored electric
G. Sgt. Walter Murray ilarriB and son, Walt, of Jackson,
lights. Popcorn was strung and used as we use tinsel today.
Miss. are spending the holidays )!ere with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ornaments were not elaborate since most of them were hand- ·
Searles and Mr. and Mrs. Doo Becker and family. Next assign- made.
, mentfor Sgt. Harris is a year in Saigon and he will be leaving for
But they experienced something that I don't believe we have
there In early Januar)'.
quite captured. There was a warmth about their Christmases,
Whatever Is Left
Let us know if you had guests or went out'of town -992-5292. that as my Mother told of the many happy days, you could see the
·Values to JSc
'
In
Our
Wide
happiness glow ihrough ber eyes.
selection!
AND TO YOU, AND YOU, and you, have a Merry Christmas
She told of the sleigh rides In the deep snow, to keep warm
Made in USA
forgetting not to pause and ponder the true significance of the
under blankets bricks were heated to help keep warm.
holldo.y.
Most of all Olristmas was a day of peace and contenlment no one was In a hurry, just a wonderful day with family and
friends and songs In their hearta for the most wonderful event,
the birth of our LordandSavi~r, Jesus Christ.
_
Each
To them Christmas was the greatest of great events and it
showed as she reminisced those happy days.
It would be so wonderful to bear the stories again over and
over.

Charlene Hoeflich

»

Eastern Local School District.
It has the professlonal opinion
Of the members of the Eastern
Local Education Association
that half day sessions better
meet the needs of the kindergarten age child, because of
his mental and physical
maturity.
It was the association's belief
that full day sessions are too
long and tire the child both
physically and mentally. The
association . is in agreement

that full day sesslons do not
provide a favorable experience
for the kindergarten student;
therefore defeating the
primary objective of the
kindergarten progrllm.
It was agreed by the
association to serid a letter
expressing i!s views to the
Eastern Local Board of .
Education.

Three welcomed into CCL membership

COURSE COMPLE'l'ED ·
·POMEROY - Glenn E.
Thompson of Rt. 2, Pomeroy, a
cable splicer, has received a
certificate for completing a
course in advanced cable
splicing at General Telephone
Co. of Ohio's Plant Training
School in Marion. Thompson
has been with the company II
years. He works in the
Pomeroy exchange in .the
company's Athens district.

Peggy Schmoll, the prettiest;
and Mrs. Rose Sebo, ·the most
.original. Game prizes went to
Mrs. Carolyn Grueser and Mrs.
Eloise White. Mrs. Kennedy
won II]¥ hostess prize and the
traveling prize was won by
Mrs . Carolyn Grueser .
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Janet Duffy, Mrs. BarQ-Why is the touch·me.
not
lhu.s named?
bara Scites, Mrs. ·Thelma
A-Its flowers pop open
Osborne, and Mrs. Donna
at
the slightest touch.
Siewart.

•
I cara

u

'

ME;xiCO ClTY (T,JP[) - A
series of increasingly stroni!
' earthquakes Saturday
devastated Managua, the
capital of Nicaragua, and
initial reports indicated most
of the city was destroyed.
The . number of dead appeared 'to be in the thousands
~ith some estimates exceeding
. 7,000.
Fires engulfed much of the
city as long as 14 hours after
the earthquakes struck around
· midnight. Slll'Vivors were fleeing in panic and jamming all
roads around the Central
American capital of 250,000,
which is situated on an inland
lake west of the Pacific
· coastline.

Commercial airlines pilots
arriving in ·Mexico City after
flying over Managua said some
lakeside areas or the city appeared to have sunk lower than
the lake's water lev eland were
being flooded.
ljoward Hughes, multi-millionaire recluse, was believed
to be among the estimated
3,000 Americans in Managua
when the earthquakes struck.
Initial reports from ham
operators commqnicating with
neighboring Central American
'countries and the United States
said the earthquakes destroyep
.the presidential palace, the
U.S. embassy, two of the city's
three major tourist hotels,
three of its lour hospitals, the
utilities buildings, and either

leveled or seriously damaged
all other sltuctures in the city.
Water mains were ruptured,
and there was no water
available either for drinking or
to fight the rapidly spreading
fires.
· "like the end of the world,"
said Juan Castanera, manager
of the Communications
Satellite (Com.sat) station on
the outskirts of Managua.

that about one third of
Managua was engulfed by
names hours later.
''What I saw o( the city, it .
was like a World War II city at
the end of the war," Castanera
said.
Ed Nichols, a barn ' ' radio
operator in Falls Olurch, Va.,
said he received a message
from Nicaragua at mid,day
Saturday reporting at least
~. ooo to 7,000 dead.
The earthquake was the
second that has devastated the ·
city this century and the third
major one in its history .
Managua was destroyed
March 31, 1931, by an earthquake a~d fire that kill
2,000 persons, and it w
leveled by an earlier quake

Castenera, speaking by telephone to Washington by means
of a special Comsat hookup,
said he had not been able to get
Into the city because of the
thousands of refugees streaming out of it. He estimated that
a great portion of the city had
been leveled by the quakes and

OPEN
THIS
SUNDAY
TO
6 PM

I

ALL TOYS

2 . PRICE

IKatie's Korner

TI:IIS WILL BE A RIOT

CHRISTMAS PAPER
AND ALL TRIMS
.

'

Ornaments, gift wrap paper,
light sets, arrangements, tie·
ons, window trims, styro foam
canes

-

In

fact

eVery

Christmas trim, decoration,

1 z :DRICI
·

·

'r

1

etc:. Buy now for next year.

~

, ,
.

LAST MiNUTE RUSH - Downtown Gallipolis was
' picture was made, some ~.ooo 'people surrounded the handjammed with ~ tiinute, Clu'lif~ shoppers Saturday
stand In the Pub~c llquare fo~ ·the awarding of the Gallipolis
afll!tftoon. '1'1118 picture wa~· $1\ot from Alfred Arnold's . ' Merchants' 1972 'Sb!!I!-A-Rama prize. Friday, college

balcony of 'the' Park Central Hotel, facing south on Second
Ave., at the State Street intersection. Two hours after this

By Katie Crow

I

CHILDRENS HASH ,
BANKS · LASSWAR

Auxiliary ladies have
annual Christmas party
POMEROY-The annual
Christmas party of the Past
Presidents of the Auxiliary to
Drew Webster Unit No. 39,
American Legion, was held
Dec. 20 at the home of Mrs. Ben
(Carrie) Neutzling. Miss Erma
Smith served as co-hostess.
• Mru . Harry Houdashelt
presided at the business
l!)eeting whjch opened with the
pledge to the flag and a prayer.
Mrs. Ellen Couch had
devotions using a meditation
"Divinely Prepared" based on
Luke 2::10-33. The secretary
and treasurer's report were
read and approved.
A th8nk-you note, from the
family ol Mrs. J. M. (Ruth)
Thornton, was read. Ruth was
.UY rillssed at the party this

year.
Secretary, Pearl Knapp is to
CGIIIaet Mlller'a Cottage in
Dllrtan and ask for the name or
Miss Thorn
:=~=
needJllince
our assistance.

hu been sent to the
Vietnam veteran at
Veterans Hospital.
_..:. are to aend him
at Chrlltmaa.
Iva PoweU was apto call !be l!lllpers and
Our meeting place
ct1111na month ..
Dora BWtlty wa•
In the holpltal at

CONGRATULATIONS TO Mrs. Charles (Pat) Jordan, wife
of Dr. Charles Jordan. Worthington, Ohio and daughter ol Mr.
Holzer Medical Center. A card and Mrs. Clarence Pric.. of PorUand, who received her master of
was signed by members Arts degree from Ohio State University in commencement
present to be sent to Mrs. exercises Dec. 1~ .
Stanley.
Pat was a former physical education Instructor at Meigs
Tbe January meeting will be High School. Her husband, ait ear, nose and throat specialist, is
held at the home of Mrs. Rhoda serving his fourth year of residency at University Hospital,
Hacke\! with devotions by Fern Columbus. Dr. and Mrs. Jordan are the parents of one daughter,
Cheesebrew and program by Kelly.
Mrs. Pearl Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Price attended the graduation of thetr
'
Following the business daughter.
meeting games were played
CAROL RHODES, RACINE, RD. has returned home after
and small prizes were awar- undergoing emergency surgery at Holzer Medical Center on Dec.
ded . Exchange gifts were 10. She will be confined to her home for at least two more weeks.
distributed by Miss Erma )\lay you have a speedy recovery.
Smith assisted by Pearl
Knapp.
BUBBLING WITH THE Otrlstmas spirit Friday was Mrs.
Mrs. Neutzllng's home was Harry (Eileen) Clark, Minersville. Eileen will have to guests for
beautifully decorated in dinner Christmas day. She and her mother, Mrs. Edith Hpod, ·
keeping with the Christmas have been baking all sorts of goodies.in preparation for the big
season. Delicious refreshments day. .
'
. .
were served by Mrs. Neutzling
and Miss Smith, Carols were
1$CE!VED WORD FRIDAY from a very dear friend, Mrs.
sung by the members with Ivan (Ullie) Roush, that her husband is a patient In a hospital at
Carrie at the organ to conclude staten Island, N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. Roush are former residents of
another enjoyable Christmas the Portland area.
' Valley Hospital
party for the Past Presidents.
Mrs. Roush was transferred from Pleasant
to the U.S. Public Health Service Hospital, Staten Island, N. Y.
Ward B-D-5. He is there for observation 1md possible surgery.
IN ' FORCE 14Q
.
A card from his many friends of the area l know would be
POMEROY -Navy Airman greatly appreciated, Mr. aoo Mrs. Roush are residents of
Da,id 0. Michael, son of Mr. Gallipolis. He is an employe of the Inland Tug Company.
and Mrs. Oliver I. Michael of
205 Roc!: St., Pomeroy, was a
MY HUSBAND AND! will be traveling to New Philadelphia
member of Helicopter Antisubmarine Squadrpn Five, a to spend Clristmas with our eldest son and his wife who are
contingency unit of Task Force momentarily awaiting the arrival ol their first child.
Christmas eve may find us prancing the floor at the hospital.
140 organized to assist
recovery operaUons for moog This is fine with us, for what greater time Is thereto be born,
From all of us to all of you a very, very Merry Christmas.
mission Apollo 17,

ENTIRE STOCK

COOKIE.
JARS
'

12 STYLES
SUNDAY ONLY

· Big Savings!

IMPORTED
GLASSWARE
A Riot of Colors
and types
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%
OFF

MINUTE GIFTS ·LOW, ·LOW PRICES

$

OFF

00

THE PRICE
ON ANY

WOMEN'S
PANT
SET
Reaular '7.44 to '13.88

I Sunday Onlyl I

Reduced!,Values to '6.94

WOMENS
PANTS
All are new Holld.ly and
fall styles. M1ny light

colors in fabrics you'll
wear from now on. SillS I

to II 1nd extr• large 32 to

44.

66

students conduc~ a traffic survey in the Old French City.
Results will be announced later.
~

Peanuts
UO
sour
~.~
e'
'*·
'

~
.WASHINGTON (UPI) -Use $!

of the word ''peanut" as a
synonym for small Is becoming
a sour joke to the adrninlstration ·
The cost of the government
price support JrOgram for
peanuts -the kind you eat has climbed out of the
''peanut" class. And according
to a recently published government study, costs will continue
marching up indefinitely
unless Congr~ amends the

::;:
~
;~

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:?:~

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~

Only a boa climbing his leg
SYRACUSE, N. Y. (UPI) -Dog warden Raymond
Kelley was called to a vacant lot Friday to pick up the
carcass of a "dead" snake fouod under a jllllk car. He put
the boa constrictor intbe cab of his truck. Kelley had driven
a lew blocks when, he said, "1 felt something crawllDg up
my leg."
_
StiU driving, Kelley reached down !lDd was promptly
bitten lour times on the lnd~xflnger. The snake, apparently
revived by the warmth of the truck's heater, then relued to
1et go.
·
"I was scared ..I've been blllen by dogs and cats, but
never asnake," he said. "I pulled the truck over to the side
of the street, grabbed a hammer from under tbe seat and
heat it until it let go.''
Kelley took the snake·to a zoo. A zoo offlclalldentHied
the snake as a boa constrictor and therefore was nonpoisonous. He aloo took the opportunity to say the snake was
indeed now dead.

.. Truman
•
~~ zn coma

The first of the series of
quakes occurred about 11:10
p.m. and another followed 10,
miimtes later, producing some
panic among the populace. The
strongest in.the series occUrred
at 1:30 a.m., and registered

lem now is drinking· water, 11

one radio amate\U' reported
from his mobile rig in his car,
the only sour.ce of electric
)lOwer for communicating.
Managua lies on the shore of
l..ake Managua , 25miles east of

the Pacific coastline, but the
lake is so polluted that its
water is undrinkable.
An international · relief
llperation began almost im·mediately: The.goveniments of
Honduras, El · Salvador and
Guatemala sent in relief
supplies, ai)d the U.S. Southern
Defense Command in the ·
Panama Canal Zone prepared
mercy flights with doctors and
nurses.
The Mexican Red Cross
called an •emergency meelir!l!
to plan relief operations and
planned to send ·,down wa,ter
purifying equipment with
parachutists in the event that
planes will not be able to land
at Managua.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1972

PARIS (UPI) - The North dined to pet a date for a new
Vietnamese peace delegation meeting unmediately .
stormed out of a techoical4evel
A u.s.delegation spokesman
meeting with American diplo- said after the brief confrontal)lats Saturda~· after protesting lion : "It was not ihe sort of
U.S. resumption ofthe fullscale discussion we would like to
air war in Vietnam.
have."
The Communists denounced
Saturday's meeting was the
"frenzied" U.S: air and naval fifth scheduled session of
attacks against North Vietnam teclulical talks. It lasted only 30
which they said had leveled minutes at suburban Gif..surVillages, hospitals, schools and Yvette before the Hanoi team
populated ..city areas, and walked out.
'
destroyed atleast three foreign
The North Vietnamese ·did
embassies.
the same last Wednes&lt;jay at the
They declared Hanoi's wil- fourth technical session.
Ungness to settle the Vietnam. Thursday they walked out of
problem peacefully and called the regular weekly four-sided
on Washington to take part in talks, Involving also Saigon
!"'rtou&amp; ,regotiations.
and the VIet Cong.
I~ was the ' third time t!J]s 1 A'
Hanoi
delegafion
week the Communists cut Short statement after Saturday's
negotiating sessions. They, de- meeting said: "In the ~x- ,

,

.

~

~

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~

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~

ff

1*
~

~

ij
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~

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~:~ fu-:~~u~~~:~ L::~::*~"!~:::::::::::x:::~::::::::::::*::::~::::::&gt;.:::::::::::::!::$:: : : :r-!: :-::!'&amp;~«».~
Agriculture Department's peanut program costs rose to $44
million In 1965 and f66 million
in 1970. This year costs are
forecast at '105 million, and he
recent study predicts they will
hit $200milllon by 1900 and flOG
million by 1985.
Department officials said no
final decision has been made
on whether the adrninisttation
will formally ask Congress
neirt year to revise the law
which locka in growing costs by
a combination of miniimnn
acreage allobnent and support
guarantees. But congressional
soUrces said they expected
moves from -or backed by the administration to put a lid
on the rising peanut costs.
Under existing law, growers
are guaranteed price supports
at a minimum of 75 per ~nt of

the " fair earning power"
parity price on . a minimum
national planting allotment of
1.6mlllion acres as long as they
continue to accept federal
production controls.
These twin guarantees contain two built-in ' cost
esc~lators .

First - with the minimum
planting allotment in effect,
farmers have been steadily
boosting per-acre yields. These
have gone from 1,232 pounds an
acre in 1960 to an estimate(!
2,209 pounds this year, thus
·increasing the amount of
peanuts eligible for support. By
19115, experts estimate the yield
will be up to 3,000 pounds.
Second -the 75 per cent of
parity minimum support

means ttie actual dollars-andcents support price is moved
up steadily, sin~ parity ,Is
based on farm costs which
have escalated. in recent
years and JrOmise to .keep
rising in the future. From
$193.Sj) P.fr .ton in 19~9, the
support Jrice has risen to $28S
ui 1972 and could reach $000 by
1985, experts estimate.
Peanuts taken over by the
government Ullller the support
program are crushed into oil
and meal and sold at low
Jrices, or exported at prices
sharply below the domestic.
support. The Agriculture Department normally sells peanuts for oil-meal crushing at
less than half the support price
paid to farmers.

UMW ·will push safety

To All
Of
Otlr Friends
and

Customen
tilt PtiCI tf Clrld
ebldeln nery lltart tills
holy season. Sincere
wishes fro11 those at

6.25 on the open-end Richter
scale at . observatories
throughout the hemisphere
that recorded it. An aftershock
that followed the main quake
registered ~.~0, and lesser
aftershocks contiriued for some
time afterward.
The National Earthqu~ke
Information Center in Boulder,
Colo., which reported the
Richter scale readings, said
th.e epicenter of the quakes was
in or near Managua itself.
''The most immediate )X'ob-

PAGE 13

tremely serious situation now
created by the United States,
we are obliged once again to
declare adjourned the meeting
of representatives and experts
of the two sides imtll another
day."
The U.S. spokesman said:
"The other side protested
against U.S. military actlvtty
in North Vietnam and adjourned the experts' meeting
without specifying any ·date."
He said the Americans
proposed a new meeting one
day next week to keep channels
Of communication open and
because they believed the
teclull&lt;!al meetings could aceompllsh useful vrork.
"The other side said li would
consider our propoSal and let

us know its response," the ,
spokesman said.
The North Vietnamese recalled their adjournment of the
Wednesday meeting and said
since then, ''The United States
has dslly launched frenzied air
and naval attacks agalnllt
Hanol, Haiphong and many
other areas of North Vlein~m."
The embassies of Egypt, CUba
and India · were destroyed,
whole areas flattened and
"barbarous crimes committed
against our people."
The statement said the at- .
tacks were Intended to exert
)X'eliJilre on North VIetnam and
were llerlolllly undiMllllllng
the negotia!lon~ lor a ....,.,..
fire.
·'

»::::::::::::-~.::"&amp;:.:.::-:~;::=:..;z:::::::::::!!s:::::::::::~:::=::::::~:i:::::::i~:::~::::?.:::::~.-*.:!·~:?.::~::::~~:m,

ALL 3 STORES.ARE OPEN THIS SUNDAY
ONLY·· -IO·AM TO 6 P.M.

I

since the controversy earlier
this year about his pMny
autobiography produced 'by
Clifford Irving. His fate was
not known, the spokesman
said, adding that he could not
confirm that Hughes was
there.
Ute Inter-Continental hotel
was not among those r,eported
destroyed, but there was little
doubt that-It was damaged. The
hotels reported d~slroyed were
the Balmoral and the Gran.

Reds walk ·o ut ·of talks
again, protest bombing

lOAM

I

Former President Anastasio
who turned over
leadership of the country to a
triumverate last May · but
r~mains
its
military
strongman, escaped injury in
the quake. He sent a cable to
President NIXon at the Florida
White House in Key Biscayne,
advising that his capital had
been devastated
an earthquake . Nix
ordered immediat elief help for the
stric n nation.
A kesman in San Francisco f r Hughes said the ecce i~ aviation pioneer \_\'as
ought to he in Managua
,........y night, staying at the
Inter ntinental Hotel ,where
h lived much of the time
Somm~a~

VOL. VII NO. 47

'

w.

lll&amp;'i.

.

•

uan .c1t
•

SHOP OUR BUSY UTTI.E STORES

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
new president of the ·United
Mihe Workers said Sat!D'day
his IDilon, coal operators and
federal and state goverrnnents
have all been derelict on mine
safetY, but under his leaderllhip the union will nllke coal
mining ufer with or without
the
cooperation
of
manacellllllllllll goyemment.
"We've 111111 d'Metm occur
too frequently," said Arnold E.
Miller In a UPI "W~fDiton
Window" lldervlew jail a week
a11ar 11w 111111 were tilled 1n •

coal mine explosion in his
home state of West Virginia.
":These disasters have got to

sworn into office, said the 1969
Coal Mine Health and Safety
Act was "pretty adequate and
stop ...
some of the various state laws
Miller said. he would insist · are pretty good.
that mine safety coounltlees,
"But the agencies on the
made up of working miners, state level and the federal
have the power to shut down Bureau of Mines hsve not
mines or evacuate mlnera if demonlli'ated any desirability
they find dangerous condltionl to enforce the law," he said.
in mines.
"And the operaton themselves
And of the U.S. Bureau of have not dane anytlllng about
Mines, he Jaid ''either they do the problem and I must confess
their job or we'll do it for that our union has done very
them."
Uttle.
MWer, one day after he (Continued on page 14)

KANSASCITY,Mo. (UPI) Former President Harry S
Truman, his heart showing
early signs of congestive
failure, slipped Into a coma
Saturday. He was listed In
extremely critical condition an Indication that death could
he imminent.
"President Truman remains
completely unresponsive and
in critical condition," said Research Hospital spokesman
Jolul Dreves. "Since last night
(Friday) his blood pressure
has dropped low enough to
require medication five
times."
Newsmen asked Dreves if
Truman's continued unresponsiveness to stimuli indicated
the former chief executive was
in a coma and the hospital
spokesman said, "yes, he's

comatose.''
"At times since noon (Saturday) his respiration has been
extremely shallow and slow,"
Dreves said.
Truman's erratic heart
condition was complicated by
falling blood pressure and
increased lung congestion .
Truman's wife, Bess, rt,
spent much of the day sitting at
his bedside. She was called
from their home when his
condition worsened during the
early morning hours.
Dreves said Truman ''shows
no sign of discomfort and his
doctors are In constant attendance. Mr. Truman also has
mote congestion in the lungs
and other indicators of early
congestive heart failure."
AIRLINER MISSING
· OSLO (UP[)- ANorwegian
Fokker Friendship passenger
airliner with 45 persons aboard
is missing after a flight from
Aelesund on Norway's west
coast to Oslo, airport sources
said Saturday. The sources
said radio contact with the
plane broke off 12 minutes
befote its scheduled landing at
the Fornebu airport.
The plane carried 42
passengers and a crew · ol
three.

up Jan. 1
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Workmen 's compensation benefits
will go up 3 per cent automatically on Jan. I under terms of
a measure sigoed by Gov. John
J. GUllgan In September.
Benefits to injured Ohio
workers and their families will
he increased to match the
percentage rise in the cost of
llvjng index .
"Injured workers and their.
families had for many years
been forced to sustain themselves on a small, fixed income
while prices at the supermarket and department stores
have soared," Gilligan said.
"Even though the maximum
benefits are well below what I
had originally requested, the
income of the injured worker
wlll at least keep up with the
rising cost of living. "
It will be the first increase In
compensation benefits in Ohio
history not requiring legislative apJroval. They are
based on .increases In the
average 0!110 weekly wage.
Gilligan said he will recommend additional changes to
broaden and improve the
workmen's compensation
Jrogram In Ohio when the next
General Assembly convenes in
January.
Joseph J. Sommer, Ohio
Bureau of Workmen's Compensation administrator, said
the bill approved last falL was
"a major breakthrough" for
injured workers because ,it
accepts the principle of annual
benefit raises.
"Be)lefit increases
historically have come about In
Ohio only every four to six
years, and have been conslstently low in comparison to
other states ' benertts,"
Sommer said.
''The new law permits benefits to reflect to some degree
the increase in the cost o! living.''
Sommer said the extra cost
could probably be aboorbed
Into (he current workmen's
compensatton rate slructure

I still alive

. without requiring increases In
~remiums to employes.
"Increased investment
activity initiated under this
administration in the state
Insurance Fund may help
ab5orb the increased cost."
After the initial Increase, the
rate of annual increases will be
adjusted according 'to tbe cost
of living index published by the
u.s. ,Labor Department on
Aug. 31.

SAIGON (UP!)-South VIetnamese intelligence sources
said Saturday they had intercepted a North Vietnamese
radio message indicating that
Hanoi's defense minister, Gen.
Vo Nguyen Giap, was killed
Friday In a time bomb explosion In Haiphong. A Hanoi
spokesman in Paris denied the
report as "an out and out In·
vention ."
The Saigon sources said the
alleged explosion occurred

while Glap, 80, North Vietnam 'a top military strategist,
was leadln1 · a mllltary
delegatloli on an Inspection of
the Tran Hung Dao 11'1118 depot
In the port city of Haiphong, the
South VIetnamese Intelligence
sources said.
.
According to the sources, the
explosion that allegedly killed
Glap was not that ol an
American aerial bomb, but a
North Vietnamese time bomH
(Continued on page 14)

'

'Faith in God' is only
weapo·n for survivors
SAN FERNANDO, Chile
(UP!) , -Survivors of the
Uruguayan 'Air Force plane
crash in the Andes two months
ago in which 29 died told
Saturday of a nightmare ordeal
in which faith In God was their
only weapon
· "Faith in God was all that we
had. 11 gave us hope and
courage", said Robert
Canessa 19 whose mother and
sister w'ere' among the dead.

gers and five crewmen. The
·crew and the five women
passengers were among the
dead.
Canessa said the crash ·occu.•red around 4 p.m. in a
snowstorm. "We were llytng on
1 Instruments and had our
seatbelts fastened because of
the wind and snow," he said.
"Suddenly we fell In two deep
air pockets. I looked out the
window and saw that we were
. just a few feet from rocks
Canessa and seven of the sticking out of the mountains.
survivors were rescued Friday What followed was dramatic
and taken to the regional and chilling.
hospital in this provincial
"There was .a violent blow
capital, 120 miles southeast of and I was knocked unSantiago.
conscious. When I came ·to, I
Air Force helicopters landed saw thst half the fuselage was
alongside the snow-covered destroyed and the pilot's cabin
wreckage Saturday and flew waswrecked. AIIIheardwere
the eight remaining survivors shouts for help and people
directly t&amp; a military hospital . crying."
All were reported in good
At this point, Canesoa bowed
condition.
his head and began weeping,
The Uruguayan F27 tur- "Excuse me, senor," be told a
boJrop disappeared Ocl. 13 on reporter. "I cannot help
a Oight to Santiago from the myself."
Argentine city of Mendoza, at Canessa said about half the
the ba8e of me Andes. It had passengers died immedltely. A
been chartered by the Old few minutes after the eruh
Olriatian Brothers rugby team landing, he said, a snOWiilde
of Montevideo fo• a series of barreled doV111 on part of the
games In Chile.
fuselage, burying seven m«e.
The plane carried 40 passen- "Day by day, other• died

until just 16 of us were left," he

' said.
C8nessa's mother, Eugenia,
and sister, SUsana, 21, were
traveling with the team.
''They did not dle lor several
days. I am a )lledical student
and I tried to attend to their
wounds. I applied compresses
with ice to reduce infections
and cleanse their wounds, It
was the most horrible thing I
hsve ever seen.
"We buried then with the
others, in the snow."
Later, Canessa said, the
survivors ''organized themselves" in their batUe for life.
"The medical students were
in c)targe of &lt;!Bring for the
injuries and controling the
food'. The architecture students
supervised arrangements for ·
converting the fuselage into a
liveable hut," he said.
Canessa said an engineering
student repaired the aircraft's
radio about 10 days after the
erash.
''The first thing we heard ·
waa that the search for Oil'
plane had been IJUII*II[ad.
Many of ua wepl bltlel'll.
However. the moat trlllflllil
calmed the rt11 and IIMd
them to bavt faith In God," be

said ..

�12- .'be

1972

mmunity
Comer By·Charlene Hoeflich

Girl Scout
By
f&gt;iary

Teachers supporting half day kindergarten

i
CHESTER ~ Half-day carols.
· kindergarten was given the
A free wlll offering was
,support of the Eastern Loca.l collected which will be given
District Education Assn. in a half to the Meigs County
meeting Dec. 14 at the Olester Children''s Home and half to
POMEROY - There's no place like home for the holidays,
« E;lementary School.
the Meigs County Community
but unfortunately ; there are many who won't be home for
A Christmas prayer was School. Mrs . Thelma .orr
Membership and world association pins were presented to presented by Mrs . Nellie reported on the Southeastern
Olristmas.
,
members
of the Salisbury Junior Troop 100 at a Chrispnas party Parker; and the Christmas Ohio Education Association
Among those Is Leda Mae Kraeuter, home economics
Wednesday night at the school. ·
teacher at Meigs High School.
·
story was read by Mrs. Donna Convention at Rio Grande.
Mrs. Mary Dorsi presented two year membership pins to. Chadwell. Mr. Charles Wills
Ledil Mae, a patient at tbe Holzer Medical Center for seven
A motion was passed by the
weeks; was ·transferred last week to the Clevelaoo Clinic where Mrs, Nancy Morris, leader, Carol Morris, Camille Swindell, accompanied by Mrs. Lavinia local association to go on
she will be confined indefinitely. Her room number is 3 N 19, so Laura Ohlinger, and Becky Dorst. Girl scout pins went to Mrs. Brannon at the piano led 1he record for supporting half day
Dorst, Gwen Folmer, and Connie Quivey, and all members of the group singing of Christmas kindergarten sessions in the
• send along a card to brighten her days.
'
troop l"!ceived the world association pins and individual gifts '
·
But l..e\18 Mae won't be alone for Olrislmas. Her father,
from Mrs. Dorst.
Eldon Kraeuter, is in Belleview with his son~n.law and daughter,
Songs, reallings and meditations were presented hy the
Dale and Roberta Milidens, and lbe family will have a
troop. Camille Swindell read St. Luke 2, 3-17 and Mrs. Dorst had
celebration in Ledil Mae's room.
·
a poem, "I Took His Hand and Followed," with carol Morris,
Camil)e Swindell, Patty Parker, Paula Swindell and Christi
ANOTHER SHUT -IN to be remembered is Mrs. ~ohn K.
POMEROY - Mrs. Sandra for retarded children byMrs.
Smith of Middleport. Mrs. Smith, confilied to her home for nearly Quivey giving recitation. The closing prayer was by Becky Cobb, Mrs. Helen Blackston, Susan Blaker, Mrs. Cobb, and
.
'
two years, will observe her 88th birthday anniversary next Dorst.
Mrs. Carolyn Grueser were Mrs. Clarice Kennedy.
Refreslunents of cookies, ice cream, soft drinks, and candy
&amp;mday,Dec. 31. Aquiet family party is being planned.
welcomed into.the membership
Mrs . Blaker presented
were served, and the girls exchanged gifts. Atleooing besides
of
the
Middleport
,Child
Condevotions using a Christmas
SUCH HAPPY DAYS this past week at the Meigs Com- those named were Cathy Quivey, Gwen Folmer, Regina Dorst,
servation
LePgue
at
a
meeting
prayer entitled "For Our
munitY Classes for Retarded Children!
and guests, Mrs. Ned Swindell, Paula Swindell, Donald, Delores held Thursday night at the
Children" by Peter Marshall.
Wednesday Miss Sue Woods and Mrs. Erma Yoho came and Cindy Dorst.
home of Mrs . Carolyn Thomas. Mrs. Grueser in welcoming the
loaded with toys for the children. There.·were sluffed clowns, !
· POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 247
Mrs. Susie Grueser presided three new members presented
dogs, liorses, frogs; and teddy bears, and crocheted purses. with
Christmas gifts for their mothers were worked on by
baby dOlls lnstde -one for e~ch of the youngsters, all beautifully members of the junior troop at a meeting Saturday afternoon at at the meeting at which time a each one with a corsage.
report was given on the party
Preceding the gift exchange,
wrapped and tagged. All of tbe toys had been made by Sue and the home of Mrs. Melvin Bonecutter.
staged
Thursday
afternoon
for
the packages were judged and
Mrs. Yoho.
Girls drew names for a gift exchange to take place at a party
the
Meigs
Community
Classes
prizes
were awarded to Mrs.
.
Earlier Flo Martin - ScOttie Simpson conducted a ceramic Saturday afternoon.
.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
workshop for the older children. They provided the greenware
Three
small
Christmas
trees decorated with homemade
vaJOS, thepaintsforthe children to use, and then after they were
ornaments and strings of popcorn and cranberries were.
fired, brought Christmas greenery for each little vase.
delivered to selected residents by patrols of Troop 39 Monday
night following a Christmas dinner party at Heath United
Wll..LIAM WALLACE, IN Holzer for several weeks, has been
Methodist Church.
trarmferred to the V. A. Center, Brown Hospital, 4100 West Third
The girls enjoyed a Kentucky Fried Olicken dinner. A
St., Dayton. Friends here are anxious that he be remembered
rededication and investiture service was conducted for· Tina
with cards during the holiday season.
Shelly, Tammy Blake, and katie Lewis. Agift exchange was held
MR. AND MRS. LAWHENCE MANLEY, Jr. of Middleport and the troop presented gifts to Mrs. Mary Wise, leader, and
Mrs. Margie Slake, assistant.
will celebrate their 13th wedding anniversary on Christmas Day.
Attending the party were Carin Bailey, Julie Byer, Sarah
Congratula ti0111!
Di~dle,
Janell Kelly, Julie Kitchen, Lori Kloes, Terri McDaniel,
It'sa new home this Christmas for Mr. and ~rs . John
Davia wbo formerly resided In ·Middleport. They moved this 'fammy McDaniel, Jo McKinney, Kim Payne, Marianne Welsh,
Debbie 'Zirkle, Terri Zirkle, Ruth Ann Blake, Barbara Thomas,
week Into Oile ~the nice homes builtby Archie Lee at Syracuse.
Angela Payne, Mindy Long, Connie Bailey, Cindy Weaver, Katie
' .ewis1 Tina Shelly, Tammy Blake, and Terri Fox·. Jennifer and
AND WJLI,T'S CHRISTMAS without family get-tog ethers:
. Joinln8 his family for the holidays Is Airman 1.C Benny SUzanna Wise wer.e guests.
MIDDLEPORT CADETIE TROOP 185
Wright who has been sbitio,ned In Tampa, Fla. He has now been
A
gift
exchange
was held at the Chrisimas Party of Troop 185
reassigned to a base near Rapid City, S.D., and will report there
held at the home, of Mrs. Fred Gibbs, leader. Gifts were
after spendlna the bolldaya here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
YOU SAVE 50%
presented to her from the scour and Mrs. Gibbs gave corsages to
lloyd Wright,
each girl.
Oniltmas Eve guests of Mr.and Mrs. Edward Stiles and
Cookies, i&gt;otato chips and sandwiches were served. Favors
daughter, Nina, Middleport, will be Mr. and Mrs. Carl (Kay)
Platter, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. James L. (Barbara) .Fry, were similar to those made for Veterans Memorial Hospital by
the troop. Attending were Joni Murray, Jennifer Wise, Kathy
Ruth Am and Sue Ellen of Pomeroy, Route 3, and Mr. and Mrs.
You get great bargains - Need sinal! last
Raler E. Stiles, Columbus. For Christmas dinner they will be Manley , Trina Gibbs, Virginia Burchett, and Judy Gilkey.
minute items? Save now on sluffed aJ1imals,
jollied by Mrs. Edna Stiles, Pomeroy, Route 3, and Mr. and Mrs.
carded toys, friction cars, battery operated
Henc:hel Nonis and Clarence of Racine, Route 2.
cars, dolls - every toy item in our store goes.
Heme for the halldaya with his parenta Is Bill Zerkle, a law
~ at Oblo State Unlversily. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Carol
(Sancn Zerkle) ~Westland, Mich. are also holiday guests of i~:~::==~~:::;:,~::i:::~::i:::i:!:!:::::::!::::':!_:~::::~:::=~::~:::::::.~:;.~~:;-;:o:;w.
Mr. andMrl. William'Zerkle, daughter, Jackie, of Syracuse.
Mrl. Ava Bellea of Wellston is spending·Clristmas weekend
.t _.. W ,W. ~ llllllr4rHaw, Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman.
'!'lle1 Win join Mrs. June Wickersham and children tor Christmas
1*. dinner.
In Berea for the holiday weekend are Mr. and Mrs. Glenn :\:t
Lambert ~ Middleport. They are spending Christmas with their :?,:
::::
1011.f1Haw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. George DoolitUe, Steven,,
Connie and Kriaty.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Lowery have joined'their son~n-law and
POMEROY - How Christmas times have changed!
daughter, Mr. and ~rs. Edwin Stein and son, Donald Lee, of
My late mother, Mayme Holmes (bless her memory), used
Poca, W.Va. for the celebration ~ Olrlstrnas.
to tell me when a child of the Christmases she experienced as a
Juanita and Carol Bachtel will oliserve Christmas a few days youngster; a far cry from the ones of today.
EVERYDAY 12c
They All Go!
late at the heme 01 Butch and Scottie Bachtel In Pboenlx, Ariz.
There was usually a doll, which was about it. One gift, but
They plan to leave for there the middle of the week and will be
they were always given, an orange and a small amount of candy.
IIIJI'ndlng two weeks.
Of course, they had a tree, but there were no colored electric
G. Sgt. Walter Murray ilarriB and son, Walt, of Jackson,
lights. Popcorn was strung and used as we use tinsel today.
Miss. are spending the holidays )!ere with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ornaments were not elaborate since most of them were hand- ·
Searles and Mr. and Mrs. Doo Becker and family. Next assign- made.
, mentfor Sgt. Harris is a year in Saigon and he will be leaving for
But they experienced something that I don't believe we have
there In early Januar)'.
quite captured. There was a warmth about their Christmases,
Whatever Is Left
Let us know if you had guests or went out'of town -992-5292. that as my Mother told of the many happy days, you could see the
·Values to JSc
'
In
Our
Wide
happiness glow ihrough ber eyes.
selection!
AND TO YOU, AND YOU, and you, have a Merry Christmas
She told of the sleigh rides In the deep snow, to keep warm
Made in USA
forgetting not to pause and ponder the true significance of the
under blankets bricks were heated to help keep warm.
holldo.y.
Most of all Olristmas was a day of peace and contenlment no one was In a hurry, just a wonderful day with family and
friends and songs In their hearta for the most wonderful event,
the birth of our LordandSavi~r, Jesus Christ.
_
Each
To them Christmas was the greatest of great events and it
showed as she reminisced those happy days.
It would be so wonderful to bear the stories again over and
over.

Charlene Hoeflich

»

Eastern Local School District.
It has the professlonal opinion
Of the members of the Eastern
Local Education Association
that half day sessions better
meet the needs of the kindergarten age child, because of
his mental and physical
maturity.
It was the association's belief
that full day sessions are too
long and tire the child both
physically and mentally. The
association . is in agreement

that full day sesslons do not
provide a favorable experience
for the kindergarten student;
therefore defeating the
primary objective of the
kindergarten progrllm.
It was agreed by the
association to serid a letter
expressing i!s views to the
Eastern Local Board of .
Education.

Three welcomed into CCL membership

COURSE COMPLE'l'ED ·
·POMEROY - Glenn E.
Thompson of Rt. 2, Pomeroy, a
cable splicer, has received a
certificate for completing a
course in advanced cable
splicing at General Telephone
Co. of Ohio's Plant Training
School in Marion. Thompson
has been with the company II
years. He works in the
Pomeroy exchange in .the
company's Athens district.

Peggy Schmoll, the prettiest;
and Mrs. Rose Sebo, ·the most
.original. Game prizes went to
Mrs. Carolyn Grueser and Mrs.
Eloise White. Mrs. Kennedy
won II]¥ hostess prize and the
traveling prize was won by
Mrs . Carolyn Grueser .
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Janet Duffy, Mrs. BarQ-Why is the touch·me.
not
lhu.s named?
bara Scites, Mrs. ·Thelma
A-Its flowers pop open
Osborne, and Mrs. Donna
at
the slightest touch.
Siewart.

•
I cara

u

'

ME;xiCO ClTY (T,JP[) - A
series of increasingly stroni!
' earthquakes Saturday
devastated Managua, the
capital of Nicaragua, and
initial reports indicated most
of the city was destroyed.
The . number of dead appeared 'to be in the thousands
~ith some estimates exceeding
. 7,000.
Fires engulfed much of the
city as long as 14 hours after
the earthquakes struck around
· midnight. Slll'Vivors were fleeing in panic and jamming all
roads around the Central
American capital of 250,000,
which is situated on an inland
lake west of the Pacific
· coastline.

Commercial airlines pilots
arriving in ·Mexico City after
flying over Managua said some
lakeside areas or the city appeared to have sunk lower than
the lake's water lev eland were
being flooded.
ljoward Hughes, multi-millionaire recluse, was believed
to be among the estimated
3,000 Americans in Managua
when the earthquakes struck.
Initial reports from ham
operators commqnicating with
neighboring Central American
'countries and the United States
said the earthquakes destroyep
.the presidential palace, the
U.S. embassy, two of the city's
three major tourist hotels,
three of its lour hospitals, the
utilities buildings, and either

leveled or seriously damaged
all other sltuctures in the city.
Water mains were ruptured,
and there was no water
available either for drinking or
to fight the rapidly spreading
fires.
· "like the end of the world,"
said Juan Castanera, manager
of the Communications
Satellite (Com.sat) station on
the outskirts of Managua.

that about one third of
Managua was engulfed by
names hours later.
''What I saw o( the city, it .
was like a World War II city at
the end of the war," Castanera
said.
Ed Nichols, a barn ' ' radio
operator in Falls Olurch, Va.,
said he received a message
from Nicaragua at mid,day
Saturday reporting at least
~. ooo to 7,000 dead.
The earthquake was the
second that has devastated the ·
city this century and the third
major one in its history .
Managua was destroyed
March 31, 1931, by an earthquake a~d fire that kill
2,000 persons, and it w
leveled by an earlier quake

Castenera, speaking by telephone to Washington by means
of a special Comsat hookup,
said he had not been able to get
Into the city because of the
thousands of refugees streaming out of it. He estimated that
a great portion of the city had
been leveled by the quakes and

OPEN
THIS
SUNDAY
TO
6 PM

I

ALL TOYS

2 . PRICE

IKatie's Korner

TI:IIS WILL BE A RIOT

CHRISTMAS PAPER
AND ALL TRIMS
.

'

Ornaments, gift wrap paper,
light sets, arrangements, tie·
ons, window trims, styro foam
canes

-

In

fact

eVery

Christmas trim, decoration,

1 z :DRICI
·

·

'r

1

etc:. Buy now for next year.

~

, ,
.

LAST MiNUTE RUSH - Downtown Gallipolis was
' picture was made, some ~.ooo 'people surrounded the handjammed with ~ tiinute, Clu'lif~ shoppers Saturday
stand In the Pub~c llquare fo~ ·the awarding of the Gallipolis
afll!tftoon. '1'1118 picture wa~· $1\ot from Alfred Arnold's . ' Merchants' 1972 'Sb!!I!-A-Rama prize. Friday, college

balcony of 'the' Park Central Hotel, facing south on Second
Ave., at the State Street intersection. Two hours after this

By Katie Crow

I

CHILDRENS HASH ,
BANKS · LASSWAR

Auxiliary ladies have
annual Christmas party
POMEROY-The annual
Christmas party of the Past
Presidents of the Auxiliary to
Drew Webster Unit No. 39,
American Legion, was held
Dec. 20 at the home of Mrs. Ben
(Carrie) Neutzling. Miss Erma
Smith served as co-hostess.
• Mru . Harry Houdashelt
presided at the business
l!)eeting whjch opened with the
pledge to the flag and a prayer.
Mrs. Ellen Couch had
devotions using a meditation
"Divinely Prepared" based on
Luke 2::10-33. The secretary
and treasurer's report were
read and approved.
A th8nk-you note, from the
family ol Mrs. J. M. (Ruth)
Thornton, was read. Ruth was
.UY rillssed at the party this

year.
Secretary, Pearl Knapp is to
CGIIIaet Mlller'a Cottage in
Dllrtan and ask for the name or
Miss Thorn
:=~=
needJllince
our assistance.

hu been sent to the
Vietnam veteran at
Veterans Hospital.
_..:. are to aend him
at Chrlltmaa.
Iva PoweU was apto call !be l!lllpers and
Our meeting place
ct1111na month ..
Dora BWtlty wa•
In the holpltal at

CONGRATULATIONS TO Mrs. Charles (Pat) Jordan, wife
of Dr. Charles Jordan. Worthington, Ohio and daughter ol Mr.
Holzer Medical Center. A card and Mrs. Clarence Pric.. of PorUand, who received her master of
was signed by members Arts degree from Ohio State University in commencement
present to be sent to Mrs. exercises Dec. 1~ .
Stanley.
Pat was a former physical education Instructor at Meigs
Tbe January meeting will be High School. Her husband, ait ear, nose and throat specialist, is
held at the home of Mrs. Rhoda serving his fourth year of residency at University Hospital,
Hacke\! with devotions by Fern Columbus. Dr. and Mrs. Jordan are the parents of one daughter,
Cheesebrew and program by Kelly.
Mrs. Pearl Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Price attended the graduation of thetr
'
Following the business daughter.
meeting games were played
CAROL RHODES, RACINE, RD. has returned home after
and small prizes were awar- undergoing emergency surgery at Holzer Medical Center on Dec.
ded . Exchange gifts were 10. She will be confined to her home for at least two more weeks.
distributed by Miss Erma )\lay you have a speedy recovery.
Smith assisted by Pearl
Knapp.
BUBBLING WITH THE Otrlstmas spirit Friday was Mrs.
Mrs. Neutzllng's home was Harry (Eileen) Clark, Minersville. Eileen will have to guests for
beautifully decorated in dinner Christmas day. She and her mother, Mrs. Edith Hpod, ·
keeping with the Christmas have been baking all sorts of goodies.in preparation for the big
season. Delicious refreshments day. .
'
. .
were served by Mrs. Neutzling
and Miss Smith, Carols were
1$CE!VED WORD FRIDAY from a very dear friend, Mrs.
sung by the members with Ivan (Ullie) Roush, that her husband is a patient In a hospital at
Carrie at the organ to conclude staten Island, N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. Roush are former residents of
another enjoyable Christmas the Portland area.
' Valley Hospital
party for the Past Presidents.
Mrs. Roush was transferred from Pleasant
to the U.S. Public Health Service Hospital, Staten Island, N. Y.
Ward B-D-5. He is there for observation 1md possible surgery.
IN ' FORCE 14Q
.
A card from his many friends of the area l know would be
POMEROY -Navy Airman greatly appreciated, Mr. aoo Mrs. Roush are residents of
Da,id 0. Michael, son of Mr. Gallipolis. He is an employe of the Inland Tug Company.
and Mrs. Oliver I. Michael of
205 Roc!: St., Pomeroy, was a
MY HUSBAND AND! will be traveling to New Philadelphia
member of Helicopter Antisubmarine Squadrpn Five, a to spend Clristmas with our eldest son and his wife who are
contingency unit of Task Force momentarily awaiting the arrival ol their first child.
Christmas eve may find us prancing the floor at the hospital.
140 organized to assist
recovery operaUons for moog This is fine with us, for what greater time Is thereto be born,
From all of us to all of you a very, very Merry Christmas.
mission Apollo 17,

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All are new Holld.ly and
fall styles. M1ny light

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66

students conduc~ a traffic survey in the Old French City.
Results will be announced later.
~

Peanuts
UO
sour
~.~
e'
'*·
'

~
.WASHINGTON (UPI) -Use $!

of the word ''peanut" as a
synonym for small Is becoming
a sour joke to the adrninlstration ·
The cost of the government
price support JrOgram for
peanuts -the kind you eat has climbed out of the
''peanut" class. And according
to a recently published government study, costs will continue
marching up indefinitely
unless Congr~ amends the

::;:
~
;~

~:

:?:~

!;l

~l

~:;

::::

~::

:;:;

f,

~

Only a boa climbing his leg
SYRACUSE, N. Y. (UPI) -Dog warden Raymond
Kelley was called to a vacant lot Friday to pick up the
carcass of a "dead" snake fouod under a jllllk car. He put
the boa constrictor intbe cab of his truck. Kelley had driven
a lew blocks when, he said, "1 felt something crawllDg up
my leg."
_
StiU driving, Kelley reached down !lDd was promptly
bitten lour times on the lnd~xflnger. The snake, apparently
revived by the warmth of the truck's heater, then relued to
1et go.
·
"I was scared ..I've been blllen by dogs and cats, but
never asnake," he said. "I pulled the truck over to the side
of the street, grabbed a hammer from under tbe seat and
heat it until it let go.''
Kelley took the snake·to a zoo. A zoo offlclalldentHied
the snake as a boa constrictor and therefore was nonpoisonous. He aloo took the opportunity to say the snake was
indeed now dead.

.. Truman
•
~~ zn coma

The first of the series of
quakes occurred about 11:10
p.m. and another followed 10,
miimtes later, producing some
panic among the populace. The
strongest in.the series occUrred
at 1:30 a.m., and registered

lem now is drinking· water, 11

one radio amate\U' reported
from his mobile rig in his car,
the only sour.ce of electric
)lOwer for communicating.
Managua lies on the shore of
l..ake Managua , 25miles east of

the Pacific coastline, but the
lake is so polluted that its
water is undrinkable.
An international · relief
llperation began almost im·mediately: The.goveniments of
Honduras, El · Salvador and
Guatemala sent in relief
supplies, ai)d the U.S. Southern
Defense Command in the ·
Panama Canal Zone prepared
mercy flights with doctors and
nurses.
The Mexican Red Cross
called an •emergency meelir!l!
to plan relief operations and
planned to send ·,down wa,ter
purifying equipment with
parachutists in the event that
planes will not be able to land
at Managua.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1972

PARIS (UPI) - The North dined to pet a date for a new
Vietnamese peace delegation meeting unmediately .
stormed out of a techoical4evel
A u.s.delegation spokesman
meeting with American diplo- said after the brief confrontal)lats Saturda~· after protesting lion : "It was not ihe sort of
U.S. resumption ofthe fullscale discussion we would like to
air war in Vietnam.
have."
The Communists denounced
Saturday's meeting was the
"frenzied" U.S: air and naval fifth scheduled session of
attacks against North Vietnam teclulical talks. It lasted only 30
which they said had leveled minutes at suburban Gif..surVillages, hospitals, schools and Yvette before the Hanoi team
populated ..city areas, and walked out.
'
destroyed atleast three foreign
The North Vietnamese ·did
embassies.
the same last Wednes&lt;jay at the
They declared Hanoi's wil- fourth technical session.
Ungness to settle the Vietnam. Thursday they walked out of
problem peacefully and called the regular weekly four-sided
on Washington to take part in talks, Involving also Saigon
!"'rtou&amp; ,regotiations.
and the VIet Cong.
I~ was the ' third time t!J]s 1 A'
Hanoi
delegafion
week the Communists cut Short statement after Saturday's
negotiating sessions. They, de- meeting said: "In the ~x- ,

,

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1*
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~:~ fu-:~~u~~~:~ L::~::*~"!~:::::::::::x:::~::::::::::::*::::~::::::&gt;.:::::::::::::!::$:: : : :r-!: :-::!'&amp;~«».~
Agriculture Department's peanut program costs rose to $44
million In 1965 and f66 million
in 1970. This year costs are
forecast at '105 million, and he
recent study predicts they will
hit $200milllon by 1900 and flOG
million by 1985.
Department officials said no
final decision has been made
on whether the adrninisttation
will formally ask Congress
neirt year to revise the law
which locka in growing costs by
a combination of miniimnn
acreage allobnent and support
guarantees. But congressional
soUrces said they expected
moves from -or backed by the administration to put a lid
on the rising peanut costs.
Under existing law, growers
are guaranteed price supports
at a minimum of 75 per ~nt of

the " fair earning power"
parity price on . a minimum
national planting allotment of
1.6mlllion acres as long as they
continue to accept federal
production controls.
These twin guarantees contain two built-in ' cost
esc~lators .

First - with the minimum
planting allotment in effect,
farmers have been steadily
boosting per-acre yields. These
have gone from 1,232 pounds an
acre in 1960 to an estimate(!
2,209 pounds this year, thus
·increasing the amount of
peanuts eligible for support. By
19115, experts estimate the yield
will be up to 3,000 pounds.
Second -the 75 per cent of
parity minimum support

means ttie actual dollars-andcents support price is moved
up steadily, sin~ parity ,Is
based on farm costs which
have escalated. in recent
years and JrOmise to .keep
rising in the future. From
$193.Sj) P.fr .ton in 19~9, the
support Jrice has risen to $28S
ui 1972 and could reach $000 by
1985, experts estimate.
Peanuts taken over by the
government Ullller the support
program are crushed into oil
and meal and sold at low
Jrices, or exported at prices
sharply below the domestic.
support. The Agriculture Department normally sells peanuts for oil-meal crushing at
less than half the support price
paid to farmers.

UMW ·will push safety

To All
Of
Otlr Friends
and

Customen
tilt PtiCI tf Clrld
ebldeln nery lltart tills
holy season. Sincere
wishes fro11 those at

6.25 on the open-end Richter
scale at . observatories
throughout the hemisphere
that recorded it. An aftershock
that followed the main quake
registered ~.~0, and lesser
aftershocks contiriued for some
time afterward.
The National Earthqu~ke
Information Center in Boulder,
Colo., which reported the
Richter scale readings, said
th.e epicenter of the quakes was
in or near Managua itself.
''The most immediate )X'ob-

PAGE 13

tremely serious situation now
created by the United States,
we are obliged once again to
declare adjourned the meeting
of representatives and experts
of the two sides imtll another
day."
The U.S. spokesman said:
"The other side protested
against U.S. military actlvtty
in North Vietnam and adjourned the experts' meeting
without specifying any ·date."
He said the Americans
proposed a new meeting one
day next week to keep channels
Of communication open and
because they believed the
teclull&lt;!al meetings could aceompllsh useful vrork.
"The other side said li would
consider our propoSal and let

us know its response," the ,
spokesman said.
The North Vietnamese recalled their adjournment of the
Wednesday meeting and said
since then, ''The United States
has dslly launched frenzied air
and naval attacks agalnllt
Hanol, Haiphong and many
other areas of North Vlein~m."
The embassies of Egypt, CUba
and India · were destroyed,
whole areas flattened and
"barbarous crimes committed
against our people."
The statement said the at- .
tacks were Intended to exert
)X'eliJilre on North VIetnam and
were llerlolllly undiMllllllng
the negotia!lon~ lor a ....,.,..
fire.
·'

»::::::::::::-~.::"&amp;:.:.::-:~;::=:..;z:::::::::::!!s:::::::::::~:::=::::::~:i:::::::i~:::~::::?.:::::~.-*.:!·~:?.::~::::~~:m,

ALL 3 STORES.ARE OPEN THIS SUNDAY
ONLY·· -IO·AM TO 6 P.M.

I

since the controversy earlier
this year about his pMny
autobiography produced 'by
Clifford Irving. His fate was
not known, the spokesman
said, adding that he could not
confirm that Hughes was
there.
Ute Inter-Continental hotel
was not among those r,eported
destroyed, but there was little
doubt that-It was damaged. The
hotels reported d~slroyed were
the Balmoral and the Gran.

Reds walk ·o ut ·of talks
again, protest bombing

lOAM

I

Former President Anastasio
who turned over
leadership of the country to a
triumverate last May · but
r~mains
its
military
strongman, escaped injury in
the quake. He sent a cable to
President NIXon at the Florida
White House in Key Biscayne,
advising that his capital had
been devastated
an earthquake . Nix
ordered immediat elief help for the
stric n nation.
A kesman in San Francisco f r Hughes said the ecce i~ aviation pioneer \_\'as
ought to he in Managua
,........y night, staying at the
Inter ntinental Hotel ,where
h lived much of the time
Somm~a~

VOL. VII NO. 47

'

w.

lll&amp;'i.

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uan .c1t
•

SHOP OUR BUSY UTTI.E STORES

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
new president of the ·United
Mihe Workers said Sat!D'day
his IDilon, coal operators and
federal and state goverrnnents
have all been derelict on mine
safetY, but under his leaderllhip the union will nllke coal
mining ufer with or without
the
cooperation
of
manacellllllllllll goyemment.
"We've 111111 d'Metm occur
too frequently," said Arnold E.
Miller In a UPI "W~fDiton
Window" lldervlew jail a week
a11ar 11w 111111 were tilled 1n •

coal mine explosion in his
home state of West Virginia.
":These disasters have got to

sworn into office, said the 1969
Coal Mine Health and Safety
Act was "pretty adequate and
stop ...
some of the various state laws
Miller said. he would insist · are pretty good.
that mine safety coounltlees,
"But the agencies on the
made up of working miners, state level and the federal
have the power to shut down Bureau of Mines hsve not
mines or evacuate mlnera if demonlli'ated any desirability
they find dangerous condltionl to enforce the law," he said.
in mines.
"And the operaton themselves
And of the U.S. Bureau of have not dane anytlllng about
Mines, he Jaid ''either they do the problem and I must confess
their job or we'll do it for that our union has done very
them."
Uttle.
MWer, one day after he (Continued on page 14)

KANSASCITY,Mo. (UPI) Former President Harry S
Truman, his heart showing
early signs of congestive
failure, slipped Into a coma
Saturday. He was listed In
extremely critical condition an Indication that death could
he imminent.
"President Truman remains
completely unresponsive and
in critical condition," said Research Hospital spokesman
Jolul Dreves. "Since last night
(Friday) his blood pressure
has dropped low enough to
require medication five
times."
Newsmen asked Dreves if
Truman's continued unresponsiveness to stimuli indicated
the former chief executive was
in a coma and the hospital
spokesman said, "yes, he's

comatose.''
"At times since noon (Saturday) his respiration has been
extremely shallow and slow,"
Dreves said.
Truman's erratic heart
condition was complicated by
falling blood pressure and
increased lung congestion .
Truman's wife, Bess, rt,
spent much of the day sitting at
his bedside. She was called
from their home when his
condition worsened during the
early morning hours.
Dreves said Truman ''shows
no sign of discomfort and his
doctors are In constant attendance. Mr. Truman also has
mote congestion in the lungs
and other indicators of early
congestive heart failure."
AIRLINER MISSING
· OSLO (UP[)- ANorwegian
Fokker Friendship passenger
airliner with 45 persons aboard
is missing after a flight from
Aelesund on Norway's west
coast to Oslo, airport sources
said Saturday. The sources
said radio contact with the
plane broke off 12 minutes
befote its scheduled landing at
the Fornebu airport.
The plane carried 42
passengers and a crew · ol
three.

up Jan. 1
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Workmen 's compensation benefits
will go up 3 per cent automatically on Jan. I under terms of
a measure sigoed by Gov. John
J. GUllgan In September.
Benefits to injured Ohio
workers and their families will
he increased to match the
percentage rise in the cost of
llvjng index .
"Injured workers and their.
families had for many years
been forced to sustain themselves on a small, fixed income
while prices at the supermarket and department stores
have soared," Gilligan said.
"Even though the maximum
benefits are well below what I
had originally requested, the
income of the injured worker
wlll at least keep up with the
rising cost of living. "
It will be the first increase In
compensation benefits in Ohio
history not requiring legislative apJroval. They are
based on .increases In the
average 0!110 weekly wage.
Gilligan said he will recommend additional changes to
broaden and improve the
workmen's compensation
Jrogram In Ohio when the next
General Assembly convenes in
January.
Joseph J. Sommer, Ohio
Bureau of Workmen's Compensation administrator, said
the bill approved last falL was
"a major breakthrough" for
injured workers because ,it
accepts the principle of annual
benefit raises.
"Be)lefit increases
historically have come about In
Ohio only every four to six
years, and have been conslstently low in comparison to
other states ' benertts,"
Sommer said.
''The new law permits benefits to reflect to some degree
the increase in the cost o! living.''
Sommer said the extra cost
could probably be aboorbed
Into (he current workmen's
compensatton rate slructure

I still alive

. without requiring increases In
~remiums to employes.
"Increased investment
activity initiated under this
administration in the state
Insurance Fund may help
ab5orb the increased cost."
After the initial Increase, the
rate of annual increases will be
adjusted according 'to tbe cost
of living index published by the
u.s. ,Labor Department on
Aug. 31.

SAIGON (UP!)-South VIetnamese intelligence sources
said Saturday they had intercepted a North Vietnamese
radio message indicating that
Hanoi's defense minister, Gen.
Vo Nguyen Giap, was killed
Friday In a time bomb explosion In Haiphong. A Hanoi
spokesman in Paris denied the
report as "an out and out In·
vention ."
The Saigon sources said the
alleged explosion occurred

while Glap, 80, North Vietnam 'a top military strategist,
was leadln1 · a mllltary
delegatloli on an Inspection of
the Tran Hung Dao 11'1118 depot
In the port city of Haiphong, the
South VIetnamese Intelligence
sources said.
.
According to the sources, the
explosion that allegedly killed
Glap was not that ol an
American aerial bomb, but a
North Vietnamese time bomH
(Continued on page 14)

'

'Faith in God' is only
weapo·n for survivors
SAN FERNANDO, Chile
(UP!) , -Survivors of the
Uruguayan 'Air Force plane
crash in the Andes two months
ago in which 29 died told
Saturday of a nightmare ordeal
in which faith In God was their
only weapon
· "Faith in God was all that we
had. 11 gave us hope and
courage", said Robert
Canessa 19 whose mother and
sister w'ere' among the dead.

gers and five crewmen. The
·crew and the five women
passengers were among the
dead.
Canessa said the crash ·occu.•red around 4 p.m. in a
snowstorm. "We were llytng on
1 Instruments and had our
seatbelts fastened because of
the wind and snow," he said.
"Suddenly we fell In two deep
air pockets. I looked out the
window and saw that we were
. just a few feet from rocks
Canessa and seven of the sticking out of the mountains.
survivors were rescued Friday What followed was dramatic
and taken to the regional and chilling.
hospital in this provincial
"There was .a violent blow
capital, 120 miles southeast of and I was knocked unSantiago.
conscious. When I came ·to, I
Air Force helicopters landed saw thst half the fuselage was
alongside the snow-covered destroyed and the pilot's cabin
wreckage Saturday and flew waswrecked. AIIIheardwere
the eight remaining survivors shouts for help and people
directly t&amp; a military hospital . crying."
All were reported in good
At this point, Canesoa bowed
condition.
his head and began weeping,
The Uruguayan F27 tur- "Excuse me, senor," be told a
boJrop disappeared Ocl. 13 on reporter. "I cannot help
a Oight to Santiago from the myself."
Argentine city of Mendoza, at Canessa said about half the
the ba8e of me Andes. It had passengers died immedltely. A
been chartered by the Old few minutes after the eruh
Olriatian Brothers rugby team landing, he said, a snOWiilde
of Montevideo fo• a series of barreled doV111 on part of the
games In Chile.
fuselage, burying seven m«e.
The plane carried 40 passen- "Day by day, other• died

until just 16 of us were left," he

' said.
C8nessa's mother, Eugenia,
and sister, SUsana, 21, were
traveling with the team.
''They did not dle lor several
days. I am a )lledical student
and I tried to attend to their
wounds. I applied compresses
with ice to reduce infections
and cleanse their wounds, It
was the most horrible thing I
hsve ever seen.
"We buried then with the
others, in the snow."
Later, Canessa said, the
survivors ''organized themselves" in their batUe for life.
"The medical students were
in c)targe of &lt;!Bring for the
injuries and controling the
food'. The architecture students
supervised arrangements for ·
converting the fuselage into a
liveable hut," he said.
Canessa said an engineering
student repaired the aircraft's
radio about 10 days after the
erash.
''The first thing we heard ·
waa that the search for Oil'
plane had been IJUII*II[ad.
Many of ua wepl bltlel'll.
However. the moat trlllflllil
calmed the rt11 and IIMd
them to bavt faith In God," be

said ..

�•
15 - The S~day Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 24, 1972

14,:- lnellwlday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. ~.1972 _

_ _

r------- ---- ~

Ar
I ea i Program
'D
h
.,
1 eat s 1

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· Ruth 'Hudsoft
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BIDWELL RESPONDS -Citlzms of the Bidwell community Thursday responded to doorto-door canvassing for the Gallia County Volunteer Emergency Squad. A lotal of $351 was
collected by four residents who took Charge of the drive. The residents presented tbe money lo
· Bill Mltdlell, right, chairman of the emergency squad commi~tee. Participating in the canva8Sillg were, left to right, Yvoone Jacoba, Joanne Basa, Ethel Dewitt and Nora Knotts.

'

i Many

.

hurt in mass pileup

'

MACON, Ga. (UP!) ...state
police reported two peraons
•. ldiJed 111d injuries too nwne' I'OUI "tO COIIIII" Saturday In a
; Jllllllllve, dlalni'eectlon pUeup
of en ln both lanes 0t Int.entate Highway 75 north of

lbcm.
Tralllc aJans tbe busy route
1INc:ll ltretdlel Into Florida
- !led up for mDes for a)»ut
seven hours · before state·
trooper, IUCI:eeded Iii getting
the wreckqe cleared away
llld lrllllc lllll\'lng.
Itt e11e point, a can went out
for an ambulances llld wrecken Iii the MaCOII area.
In addltlan to the two deaths,
· the ..trol aaid numerous InjUries, "too many to count,"

•.

: Gen. Giap
' (Cclnlinued from page 13) '
: •'fill Dlldly iet, they aald, by a
• North VletDimese who op.
polld CGIIIQmauce a! the war.
Gllp, II tbe llellll-legendsry
, &amp;eneral wbo defeated the
Frelldl at Dlen Bltn l'llu In
ltM, IIIII Pmtlni an end lo the
FreDch ph.e oflhe Jndochlna
amlllcl.
In Plrll a NGrtb Vielnameae
peKe deh$11Wn epoiresm'l11
IIIII till~ of Gljlp'a.de,a~
... llllmlfaeCind by the
AmlrltU Cedrll lntelllgence

AIIIICY·

.

The apokesmen, Biked about
tbe clellb report, told UPI: "It
Ia ID out and out Invention of
the QA." A cleleptlon lpobaman had
coounei;Ud earlier: ''We do
not lltoop to deny thla product
ol the Amllrlcan psychological

warfare.''
The Hlnoliii!Wiagency VNA
reJeaMd an acCOUDt ot a viBit
by' Glap Friday morning to
mlallle Jalllldl crewaln Hanoi.
Acalrdlac lo the report, Giap
CIJIIIII'Ilulated the gunners for
llhoalnc down American wai-planle.

The U.S. command bad "no
CCIIIIIIIellt" on tbe 1111pp01ed

Incident.
Nd V~ leaders
menlioned In radio traffic
wtlbln North Vietnam are, as
in moat countries, usually
referred to by code names.
Theae names are changed
perlodlc:aJJy. Giap may have
Ileal referred to by such a
IIIJIIe and 10 identified by
South VI~ lnlelllgence.
' Glap Ia frequently quoted on
Radio Hanoi or by Hanoi's
Vletum Nt!WII Alllllcy, He wee
1110111 rec~~~tly quoted In a
llroldeall Friday as having
told an Army 2ah anniversary
celelntlon Thw-aday tbat ''the
American lmperhillsts and
llencllllen are Jos1ni and wUI
be dllfeated completely."
Glap - born Iii 1912 to a
flmll7 ol well-to-do peaaants in
~ provlilce, just
mrlll of tbe current boundary
betwwn North and South Viet-

Q...
nam.

He attended the same high
ICbool In the former imperial
c.phl of Hue thai had esrller
e.tr•"' Ho Chi MiDh and Ngo
1M DIIID, ieepedlwly the
llnl p; IMil al North and

' IDalll """'"' .
11t1r ....,., Jaw ln
F I Bt Jollied llo Cld Minh's

tt IP ' •

IIIOt-lll and
'I
I I dllrtow lillmber of
Ill• llMIHIIbla Communist

-~~~..,.. bid any fOrmal

~~~~~~r.~w~sw~,M

:

....... t ""•

up~

.~ · dultiiiWorld

Miller to
have been reported.
The first accident happened
about a.m.
by midday a open up
slate trooper at the Forsyth
barracks, north of Macon, said
there had been at least.
Union HQ
collisions.
5

and

20

Anti-hijack
costs study
is announced
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
( UF'I) - Tri-State Airport
officials
have
announced plans for covering some of the costs
involved in imple~nting new
anti-hijacking security
measures required by the
federal government.
Airport manager William
Ma:ys ilaid sponaors of Tri-State
will be asked to incre- ' an~
nual contributions to the field
when they meet here next
Wedneaday.
The 8p011801'8 include the city
ol Hunlinllton, the towns of
Ceredo, Kenova, Ashland, Ky.,
the Hunlngton Industrial Corp.,
and the counties of Cabell,
Wayne and .Boyd, Ky.
The security standards,
ca~ f~,earJiea: lbiiiDAllltllrby
TrlliiJ)QI'tatlon Secretary JOhn
Volpe, muat be operational by
Feb. 8.
Mays said costs will run a
minimum of $30,tioo annually,
and at least tbree full time
pollee offlcera will bave to be
added lo the airport staff. The
a!rport authority plans to ask
the 1973legi81ature to grant its
guards pollee powers, Mays
said.
·

Blakeslee has
Rotary program
MIDDLEPORT - Charles
Blakeslee conducted an
audience participation type
program on the significanCe of
Christmas following dinner at
Heath United Methodist
Chur.ch when the Middleport ,
Pomeroy Rotary club met
Friday evening. Harold
Hubbard, vice president,
presided in the absence of
President Gene Riggs.
Two .guests were Charles
Clarkson, a former member of
the club and resident of Middleport, now of Wisconsin, and
Allan Blackwood, son-in-law of
Hubbard. Ladles of the church
served the dlilner.

UMW satel y'
~

(Continued from page 13)
''Our safety today Is worse
Ulan It was 20 or 30 years ago,"
be added.
"lliltend lo sit down and talk
witb the coal operators and
exp~in to tbem what 1 lhlilk
ought to be dooe," Miller said.
" If they continue to react like
they have, then it's going to
become mandatory that we
provide safety.
"We may get Iii tbe position
where we couldn't care Jesa
about the federal Bureau of
Mines," Miller said. "Eitber
tbey do their job or we11 do it
for them ."
.He said a key to mine saleiy
was to penni! miners to strike
or otberwise leave tbe niines to
avoid dangerous working
conditions. He pdded that
"when you find an area of
Imminent danger, you Clllllot
wa!t for tbree or foil' mont111
for 110111e011e to move on It. It's
Ifill to te done then."
Under prernt union con:
tracts with mine operators,
ufllty Is an iasue for ll'bttrallon, but Miller laid "l don't
think an)' man olllbt to have to

m:bltrate a man'• life."

MASON - Mrs . Emory
(Ruth ) Hudson, 67, of · New
Cumberland, W. Va., died last
week from injuries in · an
automobile accident at New
Cumberland. Mrs. Hudson's
husband .remains in a critical
condition in a New tum berland
hospital.
The Hudsons were in a
Volkswagen when struck by a
traclor trailer,
Funeral services for Mrs.
Hudson were held Saturday at
1 p.m. at the Fields Funeral
Home in New Cumberland .
Among tbe survivors, in ad. dition to her husband, is a
daughter, Mrs. John (Evelyn)
McDaniel, of Mason.

Iva Simpk4ns
PT. PLEASANT ..:. Mrs. Iva

Gertrude Killingsworth
Simpkins, 70, 312 Second
Street, Point Pleasant, was
dead on arrival at Pleasant
Valley Hospital at 6:50 a.m.
Saturday.
She was born at Leon June
'!1, 1902 a daughter of the late
Richard Killingsworth and
Mamie Fielder Kiilingswortb.
Sur vivors include her

.

Santa came toJ King on ti~e

.

for IJ.andicap

by April 15, 1973 to flilance
special educaUoo claSIII'OOUlS
and •supportive services. The
State
Department
of
Education, in turn, will notify
local districts on the allocation
of special education units by
May 15, 1973 .
. "However ," Weinfurtner

said, "we intend to begin an
intensive recruitment drive 'in
January in order to fill tbe
units that are allocated lo Ibis
region.,' '
Besides finding qualified
teachers for emo!ionally and
meptally hand icapped

Postmen to

work late

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
. Postal Servlce.reported Satorday tbat regiooal Postmasters
general bave been authotlzed
to schedule delivery service on
Christmas Eve in some areas
where volume continues heavy
becallSe of late maUings.
Parcel poat : delivery was
expected Sunday In Cincinnati
and Columbua, tlllo.
In a statement, the service
said Christmas mall volume
was con'tinuing to rise at a rate
of 8'1. per cent over last year's ·
holiday crush.
·

The Postal Service Utristmas Communications Center
said 10.25 billion pieces of mail
were processed Iii time for
Christmas, witb poor weatber
.in the east and central regions
contributing to some delays.
"The worst winter weatber
of the century poses a big
problem in maU movement" in
the central states, said the
report.
Mail volwne in ihe East and
South was reported 11 per cent
higher !han last year at this
time.

children, Weinfurtner explained, recrili~f!ent wlll also
foc us on obtaining teachers for
children with · low-incident
handicaps - those children
·' who are auditorially or visually
impaired or !bose who are
crippled ~ and additional
school PsYchologists •
"At tl)is time there are no
low-incident units in this
region," Weinfurtner added,
"and of the 16 school
psychologist units our )1
counties were eligible for this
year, seven bad to be turned
hack to tbe state due to a lack
of qualified applicants. We're
unable to compete for school
psychologists with otber areas
in the areas of salary and
fringe benefits. ~ ·
Weinfurtner told tbe board
that school district plans from
the II county area to meet
provisions of Substitute Senate
Bill 405 were the most refined
and most complete of those
submitted to the State
Department of Education.

EM,?~~~i~~~ Your Wayne National Forest
~~~~~::~ E~~n:ieAu~~.:'ak~: !~!~t IRONTONDis~!:~~:ofthemost ~:~~.;, ~~tdl:./::~o~a~o:h~: ~~e

_·,;: _l:'~·_.:,_[i·!:

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$

M

:¥

World prepares to celebrate Christmas

ews .. in Briefs

protect both men and women.
The governor promise&lt;! to
press for such legislation ned
year·
.
King had to work for hiS' second present _ ,. a vote of confiden~ froni his union's execu·
live board.
·The fiery union chieftain denied after the four-hour closeddoor session of tbe 35-member
board that there was any strife.
. Ohio Politics '
But
a. post-meeting
examination of the room at tbe
which would have repealed Sheraton Hotel . revealed
Ohio's female protective labor shredded coffee cups and notes
· laws for finns employing less . . on tbe .tablecloths indicating a
. than 15 persons.
struggle between King and
King's union stubbornly ' Secretary-Treasurer Warren
fought the legislation for two J. Smltb.
'
yeats, even after a court ruling
Board Supports King
held . tbe protective litws un·
The only message King
constitutional for larger !inns. would give out for public
Giiligan's veto messagefoll- consumption was that the
owecl the reasoning of King and board had reaffirined support
otber union members - that for botb himself and Smltb.
legislation should be enacted to
Any attempt to replace King

witb Smith as chief lobbyist for was defeated that year in a bid
the union apparently went out for state-treasurer.
the window for the time be1·ng. N th te · his
·
ow e vo rs m rev1sed
Smith wo.uld have given the Senate district have defeated .
' a more
·
governors•' off1ce
sym- him, · making him tbe final
· 1abor dealings "loan scandal" principal to he
pa th et'1c ear m
witb the legislature.
turned out of public office.
Several ghosts of ChristA third skeleton in tbe GOP
mases past are watching ·as closet is still kicking around.
Ohio Republicans attempt 1o Thai would be state Rep. Robassemble a statewide ticket for ert E. Netzley, R-Laura, who
1974.
helped spearhead an anti.
One or tbe ghosts, Roger w.. esta blishment movement
Tracy Jr., may actually be on witbin tbe party and probably
the ticket. lie is interested in prevented the 1970 wounds
running again for auditor a · from healiilg in time to win tbe
position his father and gra~d, 1972 elections.
fatber both held.
Had Tracy won the auditor's
Republicans
in
the
race in 1970 over Democrat
legislature have left the
Joseph
T.
Ferguson,
Democrats a couple o( dandy
.Republicans would have
legacies
for the new year - a
controlled tbe Apportionment
chalice to get credit for
Board and probably tbe state
enacting a pair of apple pie and
House of Representatives next
motherhood 'bills.
year.
One which the Republicans
Another Republican spirit let slip tbrough their fingers
state Sen. Robin T. 'rurner R· was tbe P,roposal to lower tbe
r-~--~------------ Marion, apparenUy has b~n nge of adultbood from 21 to 18,
put to rest witb an ill-fated re- matching the voting age .
o • •
. election attempt.
The otber .point-maker for
Turner Turned Out
the Democrats, when tbey take
Turner, the only figure in tbe over the HoUse, will ·be enactstate "loan scandal" of 1970 ment of installment sales
.
.
..... :who actually admitted ac- protective clauses left out of a
•
cepting and spending cam- consumer credit "trap" bill
By Bob Hoeflich
paign donations from a Ibis year at the insistence of
questionable loan finding finn, finance lobbyists.
POr.{EROV- It's been a busy holiday season and now tbe
big day is just around tbe corner.
Personally, I'm green and I don't mean with Christmas. It's
commonly known as envy, For example, friends, Mrs.· Paul
Nease and her son, Dick, ·will be leaving Christmas Day .for a
beautiful vacation trip to Switzerland. All sorts of activities are
planned and they'D have a baU.
I'm a Utile green allOut Karen Griffitb, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs: Charles Griffitb, Pomeroy Route 3, and a junior at Ohio
LANSING, Mich. (UP!) ~ satisfied witb the $50,000. So
State. Karen will be leaving on De::. 27 for Pasadena and tbe
Rose. Bowl Parade and game. This is a part of her Christmas Officials declared a wilmer this morning I went to church .
Friday in the contested to thank tb•'Lard for what I've
from her parents.
.
Of course, it doesn't always take a trip to make a Big drawing of Michigan's $200,000 got and I came back home to
find out I got more money,"
Christmas, doe4 it? Sometimes, it's the litUe tbings tbat count. pre-Christmas "super lottery,"
Youknow,llkehealtb, which Is really notimportantuntil it starts· hut were unable 1o placate tbe' The confusion began Thursto fail.
·
.
loser with tbe $50,000 con- &lt;lay when lottery staffer
Gregory Gardner, acting
One of the happiest young people we know thi~ Christmas solation price.
emce·e at the Southfield
1'You11 be hearing from
season is Maureen Hennesay. Her mother, Phyllis, has been
· returned to ,the Hennesay home on Mulberry Ave. from the tne," Mrs. Betty Coleman told ceremony, read tbe number
Holzer Medical Cenier. Phyllis suffered a heart attac~ just a bit tbe officials wHen infonned or "9" upside down from a white
sheet of paper during tbe
after Mr. Hennesay's unexpected death and it was reaDy touch tbeir decision.
"I'm nottaking tbat $50,000," $50,000 drawings. He read il as
and go for a bit. Maureen 's so pleased to have her mother at
home an_d progressing. Health is playing a part in tbe Christmas the 42-year-Q(d registered
Mrs. Coleman was No. 9
of Racine's Harold Carnahan also. Isabelle, his wife, a very nurse from tbe Detroit suburb
Mrs.
Coleman was conplea5ant and popular lady, has been quite ill at the Holzer of Romulus told newsmen.
Medical Center and she is expected to get hack home for tbe "I'm going to get at least testant No. 9 and the $50,000
holiday,
$200,000.1'hey are going to lose prize should have gone to her.
Gardner doubled tbe trouble
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cohen, Butte~nut Ave.,l?omeroy, have if they don't give me that
when
he called off tbe winning
been bavjng a great holiday season and lncidentaUy, one of the , mOjleY ." 1
')be .~,000 goes to Slllnle~ .~,oqp~wnber: as a ''9:' when
gteate!ll•YIB1'3 of, thetr.JIIves.
'
·,
For example, one evening last week members of the Rutland K. Yao, an unemployed finan- it was actually ~ "6" and
Fire Department and "Santa" visited the Cohen's bringing a big cial analyst, who initially had declared · Mrs. Coleman tbe
box of fruit and' candies for tbe couple. The gift was in a(i- $50,000 winners as a result of a super winner. Yao was contestpreclatlon of Mr. Cohen's work in collectlilg and repairing toys 1o number-calling goof which , ant No.6.
"We are deeply sorry for tbe
give to the fire department's program to help tbe un- when compounded, resulted in
confusion which occurred at
derprivileged -during the holiday season. He's helped out for Mrs. Coleman being identified
the drawing," deputy lottery
about eight years. Incidentally, Mr. Cohen resided in Rutland as the big winner.
chief
Daniel Dolley said. "We
Yao, 58, of Dearborn, said
from 1897 to 1915 when he moved lo Pomeroy.
Die\ you know the Cohens observed their 58th wedding an- he's excited about winning tbe are human error which caused
niversary on Nov. 23? The couple delights in tbeir tbree grand- $200,000, but sympatbized with the confusion will not be
repeated ."
sons, 'John, Frank and Jim Sisson, whom the couple reared after Mrs. Coleman.
Dooley said he was posiiive
· the death of their daughter, Alice. John, Frank and Jim have
"Last night, l decided 1
tbe right winner had been
presented the Cohens witb nine greati!J'anddaughters.
didn 't rea lly care what
chosen.
"They keep us young," Mr. Cohen said.
decision was made. 1 was
"If there were any doubt in '
·The Cohens are naturally wrapping up plans for a big holiday
my mind thai nwnber six was
reunion.
not the actual winner of
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
So far as we know, everytbing_is relatively under control in
$200,000,
our decision might be
The Middleport E-R squad
providing Olristtnas for the underprivileged. The Meigs Indifferent," he said. "I have
firmary CbriBimas appeared to be Jagging a bit Thursday night, was called lo tbe Middleport
discussed our options with the
but, perhaps, by Ibis time tbings are inoking up. Hope so. Those busineSs section at 10:30 a.m. office of the attorney general
infinnary residents do ,get tbe biggest enjoyment out of the Friday for Mrs. Patricia
and with Gus Harrison, the
holiday season. By tbe way, if you haven'f seen the lilfinnary's Cleland, Langsville, who had lottery commissioner, and they
outdoor decorations, do drive by. This y,ear's effort certainly · become ill in her car. She was are in agreement witb this
taken to Veterans Memorial
seems tbe "best yet."
decision."
Hospital
and admitted.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall of the Cheshire area have cerialnly
been a help at the Infirmary Ibis' year. Mr. Hall telephoned tbe
infirmary to offer his help In providing a little brighter Christmas there. It all turned out that HaD agreed to purchase a
comfortable cbalr for both the living room of the men and. tbe
women. You can be asaured that the chairs will be more Ulan
well received. Certainly a generous gesture on tbe part of Mr.
and Mrs. Hall.
Middleport'sGene Grate has again done his '~hing" and his
products - homemade chocolate candy and hand decorated fruit
cakes -are in the mail or have been personally delivered. The
total this year was 110 fruit cakes and about 75 pounds of candy.
About 30 of the Grate clan will gather at Gene's home for diMer
NEW HOMES FOR SALE
on Christmas evening.
·
like I say, II has been a busy season. May I wish each of you
readers -and I hope tbere are several of you - the merriest
· BR, 2 baths,
-""m• tofal electric wiih Wlnlanison
·Olristmas ever and only the best in 1973.
·
Heating and Ceo
""""lng. General Electric

..-

Ofthe
Bend
.

11
.

InCh"'•

•.2 ....

.-

I

I

OPEN
9 TO 9 DAILY
CLOSED SUNDAY .
252 THIRD AVE.

SUPER MARKETS

ARMOUR*STAR SEL~CTED PORK
· we r~~erve fh• right ta limit

U.S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED

QUAnhl•t$0JI 1111 items. in this ld

Prices eltetti "e thru SJt Dec.

30. ltU. None sold tta. d~Jten:

1

lb.

Goof~d-up

lottery
loser quite angry

.DEVELOPMENT CORP.

SPLIT LEVEL

Fas oL

appliances, full•,
streets, 2'12 car garag•, •.

l

D

;aped, concr:ete dnve &amp;
lcony, lot 75x 17S, county

II-LEVEL .

'

j

get basic level jobs

Bedroom, 3 bath room s, 2 car garage, elec1ric forced air

1

STATE FARE·
WIENER OR
SANDWICH

dl~fng

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
The state could save nearly
John J. Gilligan instructed four $1.5 million annually Iii welfare
calMel members Friday to de- . payments by placlilg ablevelop a program to place quali- bodied persons in jobs, accord,
fled welfare recipients and ing to tbe governor.
other unemployed Ohioans Iii
Prospective employes would
basic-level job vacancies Iii tbe come from trainees in WIN,
Department ol Mental Healtb which tra}ns welfare recipients
Md Mental Retardation.
for employment, and from
Gilligan aald such a hiring among current state employes
program would have two pur- , who were hired under tbe led,
poses.
era! Emergency Employment .
"Not only wllllt improve sig- Act
nlficantly the quality of care
The state expects about aJO
we can o1er to palients In o..- vacanciee dw-lna the next
meatal tnatltullona," the three monlhl .
p.VIIInor aald, ''but It will aim GWipn requested the lllllapennlt ua to Irina new people tance lnlm the Me!UI Health
tn1o ow traltllnl JOCIIPIIIII, and Mlllllal Retardltkll, Jlur,
....., fll1ber ClltiDC Into lbe •• of !!',a• • ~ llenlcel,
wtlfare and unemployment Penonlal Dip
ancllbe
rolll'."
Public Welfare clepartmtnt.

•lmtut

electric"

"

with Williamson ~
"•ntral air conditioning.
General Electric'
D .arpeted, landscaped,
concrete drive &amp; streeb, ..
Jrage, dining balcony, ·
lot 9Sx175. county water, Tara .._ Ner system.

FIVE LEVELS

I

3 Bedrooms, 21 1 baths, 2 car garage. 12x.2 4 living room ,

total electric family room, fireplace .

Building Sites Available .
"'
Kingsberry Homes buill to Iii
specifications.
All Underground Utilities Provided.

,.

any

FOR INFORMATION OR APPOINTMENT
·367-7250
AOI)ISON, OHIO

~-----------------';.:·

. .-

29 c

POTAIO

12-oz. Can

1-lb. Pkg.

(Plus Tax
In W. ¥1.)

IMPERIAL

WARSAW FALCON
FRESH PACK

WHIPPED

pg~~~H

MARGARIIE
l·lb.

Tub

PICKLES

SMUCKER'S FEATURES
GRAPE,JELL Y •. . ..• ; ••••••••.•. ,.,._,., 69c
SWEET ORANGE MARMALADE . . "·" ·'" 39c
'CHERRY PRESERVES , , , •.••. ..• . ll·OL '"' 49c
PEACH PRESERVES •. , ••.••. . ... ll·oLm 48c
APRICOT PRESERVES •••• • •..•.. "·" ·'"' 45c

HOTDOGS
12-oz.

.

PARKAY SOFT

MARGARIIE

Ouart6
. 3~
Jar

49~

Pkg.

oL·

11

o

STATE

BEVERAG

Pkg. of 8

balcony.

SOUTHERN COLONIAL
fcS room. basement, total

J BR. 2112 baths.

For Slicing lb

il 1 or Salads

·THOROFARE
ALL FLAVORS

.UNS

furna ce ~nd air conditioner, family room, l.:t' x26' mast er

bedroom ,

lb.

Cli ISP GREEN HEADS
AT A SPECIAL LOW PRICE

ARMOUR* STAR - U.S. GOVT. INSPECTEO

wafer, Tara sewer system .

Welfare recipients will

GE

'

.-.2

I

Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (uPI) ~ Yuletide notes from the Statehouse:
F k
tr ran · . W. · King, con,
overslal president of tbeOhio
AFJ..CIO
gifts d . • had 8 couple of nice
ropped into his stocking
lat e Iast
week.
G
ov. Jolm J. Gilligan veloed
women's rights legislation .

Beat

WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ It
was tbe first Ume, after 24.
years as a coal miner, tbat
Arnold R. Miller ever stood in
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·::~;::::;::;.::.:=:.m·:-:-:·:·:-:·:·:·:~-~~::::::x.-::::::..-;:_~::::.-:z::~·.s·:~....~..w;-;-;·;·;·:·:•o.o.:·:·;~·=·:·:·:·:·:··:::~-::::·:o.:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·::::::::::.
husband,
'Roy
Simpkins;
ten
:::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;::::::::::~=~::;:;:;
•.•..•;~:;~:;:;:;:;:;3;:~~::'-!~1;::-! ·~~lij:.&amp;.1!:'1J.l:!;~:;:~:~;~*::;:::;::§~:;:~::::;:~;:~;:::;:::;~:;~:::::::::::::::::?.::;::~:::~:::::::::::~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:~ 1
the president's office at United
Mine Workers headquarters;
Now be was the president,
and more than a half century of
I
.1.1.1
rule of the union by tbe late Helen Bonecutter, Hilda ;~;;;;:
,13:.1 L. Lewis and Lewis' McCausland, all or Point ;:;:;:;;
By T. ALLAN WOLTER
was carried out with considerable ef- have been grappling witb Ws forest ;:;:;:;;
political heirs was over.
For most of the 300 miners
of tbe most significant conwho went to see Miller's and Opal H~ghes of Mason, two iirii critical areas o( the Fort;st Semce free blister rust to discover a certain chann tributlons to the ·program has come • .
•wearing-in Friday, It was the sons, Leroy Simpkins of West i:i:i:i: lmprovemenl p~ogr_am IS white pine, a about the currant's Americarr cousin, from the University of Wisconsin at .......
first time they had set foot Iii Columbia an~ Wesley Simp- · ;!f;' ~eg:dary spee~es 10 Eastern loggmg the common gooseberry bush.
Madison, where five apparently rust ,t.i_!_f:.
the building.
kins at home· one brotber the ::l;:;; IS ry.
Thus assured of afuture, blister rusts resistant white pines have been iden- ·:c
W. A. "Tony" Boyle, who Rev. Howard Killingswoth or iif!i Since tbe turn .of the ~ntury, spread and continued to produce tbe tified:
;;§;;;
headed tbe 'union for a decade, Point Pleasant; 38 grand- :i:i:i:i ho~ever, when a shipment of illfected spores which hungrily seek out the, The offspring from tbese trees, aloog ~~­
and whom Miller defeated in a children and 19 great- :;:;:;:; white pines ~ere !':"ported from white pine. Entering through the with hybrids from more Ulan 800 ·.;,····
court-ordered ele&lt;;tion, had not grandchildren.
i~~{ Europe, Amencan white pine stands •needles - turning them a vivid rust superior trees identified tbroughout tbe t~
nm an open administration.
Shewasprecededindeath by ;;:;:;:; a~rossthe country .~ve been plagued c~Jor - the blister rust fungus grows Region, are currently undergoing ):·:~
Denver C. Hartwick, of two daughters and one sister. i{:! wofltb blitsster rushith. Thisecjwr~a aocialaltediaearnetinseg inside the branches until it reaches the testing at tbe Oconto River Seed OrSmithfield, Pa., retired after 43
She was a member of tbe :;:;:;:;
sor • w c r
es
tree's single layer of living tisaue chard, where new expanded facilities ;:;§~ .
years in the mines, said "Tony Church of Christ in Christian :t:i: hosts to survive, and infec
. Is or
.
kills (cambium) just inside the bark, and have been constructed.
~-.::::
Boyle and all his stonn Union.
:i:i:i:i tbousands of acres of white pme an- .then proceeds toward the trunk. At this The first white pine tests at the ortroopers treated me like a dog"
Funeral services wiD be i:i:i:i: nuaUy. .
.
point it girdles the tree and, in effect, chard were conducted in 1969 witb a f~
when be had visited UMW Tuesday al2p.m. witb tbe Rev. ;:;;;:;: While bhster rust was excluSively a strangles lt.
total of 2,880 plants involved. However, ~::!:l
headquarters In the past.
James L. Buhn officiating in }iiii European disease, the carrier or
Efforts lo put tbe blister rust out· of the program is geared eventually to ~m
Now Hartwick sal at Boyle's the Wilcoxen Funeral Hqme in :;:;:;~ alternate host, 10 which II rested be- · business in tbe East· are concentrated atcommodate over 21,000 plants per '!~ 1
desk, waiting flir Miller to sit Pol9t Pleasant and blil'lal wlll :i:fi tween mea:Js of white pine, Wflll •the ' at the Oconto !liver Seed Orchard on ye~r. ~suits fri&gt;i!Ctti~Betitr!lttal' ti!stli;''''fl!
there; and miners and take place . in Suncrest , ;:;:;:;= black CIJITant., Initial efforts at .blister the Nicolet Forest, but this is, by no which mvolve exposmg the' white pine ;~~$
reporters (who aim bact' ~ot Cemetery.
i:i:i:: rust control m the Unl~ States, means, an exclusive· undertaklilg. For seedlings to rusk:arrying currant, will %j
found the premises open in the
Friends may call after 4 p.I)l. j~:i:; ther~fo~e, cons1sted simply .of , tbroughout mo6t of .this century, a wide be available for tabulation in 1972 or
past) roamed tbe headquar- today at tbe Wilcoxen Funeral ~i'::i: elmunatmg the black currant, ,which horizon of institutions and lnclividuals 1973.
jjf:~jj
ters.
.~;l~1;t~~~~m;~~~~~;~~jm~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~ml~~~~;;~~~~ll~~1~~i~li~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~r:~~~~mmM~U-;1Iili@llil~~~~~l;ml~~~~;~~*Ii~~r~®*~f:~~;l;l;~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~;ll~l~~~~;~~~I1f~~~~~;~~~~t~i~l~~;~~~lfW
"l feel proud," Hartwick Home.
said.
"This is the first time that
anY rank-and.file miner has
seen anything but tbe outside of
Ibis buUding," said Charles By United Press International to take one of the 380 extra airports to spend Christmas back CbriBimas Day in con- stations broadcast ChriBimas
Plemmons,~ miner from Local
junction with the collUllillee of music, including "White
Parisians deserted the "City trains assigned lo weekend witb their families.
1342 In Drakesboro, Ky .
-Terminals at Chicago's liaaon with families of service- ChriBimas," Australians seek
of Light" to spend the. duty to speed vacationers to
Miller said the UMW ''no Utrlstmas weekend In the Alps the Alps or tbe coast. ·
O'Hare lntern•tional Airport men detaliled Iii North VIet- relief from the beat at beaches
longer belongs lo one man." He or on the coast, and Americans
and swimming pools.
Parisians use any holiday for were jammed becaWle of the nam.
said "coal miners have been jammed airports and highways an excuse to beat it out of the holiday rush, as were most
His Holinesa Demetrios I,
Leaders Ask Bombing Hall
pushed around by dictators in their rush to spend . tbe city and, by rush hour Friday, major metropolitan airports
Leaders · ol 10 religious ecumenical patriarch of Conlong enough." And he promis&lt;'d holidays with loved ones as traffic on tbe outskirts of the across the country.
organizations asked evangelist stantinople, has sent Olrlstto spend most of his time in the people around the world pre- city snarled almost hopelessly.
Highways in many cities Billy Graham to implore mas greetings and blesalngs in
coal regions and In the mines, pared to celebrate Christmas.
In the Philippines, Aala's were jammed witb motortsts President Nixon to halt the an encyclical to tbe Greek
where Boyle seldom went.
Students and young couples only Christian country, wh6 decided to provide tllelr bombing in North Vietnam "in Orthodox Archdiocese of North
Then, after-his swearing In, balancing skis on their shoul- Christmas will be celelrated own holiday tranaporlalion.
the name df tbe Christmas and Soutb America.
Miller promptly fired au but ders flooded Paris' Gare ' de under martial law. A ~dnight
"Let us bear to !Dm, Instesd
Cash r~ers were ringing Christ."
four members of the 24- Lyon railway station, perhaps to 4 a.m. curfew lmpoaed by the merchants' favorite aong
of
gold, incense and myrrh, tbe
UtriBimas in Australia is
member executive board of the
authorities has forced the as last-minute shoppers celelrated much the same as confession of our perfect faith,
union and also dismissed ~&amp;.-~c:-~t':'eWCI 'IR''IJ'Sill88e8i traditional midnight masa on hurried to purchase Christmas Iii. America, but while tem- a blameless moral disposition
general counsel Edward L.
WINNERS NAMED
peratures border the · 120 and life, Jove and peace to one
Christmas Eve throughout gifts.
Carey and Suzanne Richards,
POMEROY - Whiners in Roman Catbolic churches In · In Jackaon, Tenn., needy degree mark. While local rndio anotber and to all."
executive assistant to Boyle. tbe llnal glye-away of tbe the country to be moved up two families were allowed to shop
Miller tben appointed ·his holiday promotion . by hours so churchgoers can be at a special toy store set up by
·-AW-'•'•':•~''"'·W-&gt;~
·~·.-.~y.-if;l
• •. ••
fl'i."i"'it'i ,•;tNJ'•• • o;. .v~o;.".•;; •"" ••'"''
..XVN~~.
own men to fill 14 of the new Pomeroy Merchants were home before tbe curfew Ume. tbe Salvation Army. Every
vacancies. Joseph A. "Chip" selected at tbe New York
ABright Note
needy family In the area which
Yablonski, son of Boyle's ' Clothing House Saturday
Martial law; however, aim applies to tbe Salvation Anny
mordered 1969 opponent, was altemooa. The winners are added a bright note for to shop Iii the store gets a
appointed to replace Carey.
Jennie L. Utile, Pomeroy Filipinos. Officials lifted a 2- certificate for each chUd lil the
By United Press International
Miller said tile ousted board Route 2, a otere&lt;J; Frances year-Qld ban.this year to allow famUy. The chUdren may then
SEOUL- PRESIDENT PARK CHlJNG..HEE Saturday won
members had been "illegally Alkire, Harrisonville, ll color Importation of such goodies ee drop by the 8\0re before
~lection to a new sll-yesr tenn in voting in which he was tbe
appointed" by Poyle rather television, and Randall L. apples, pears and grap ea
Christmas and pick a toy they ooly candidate. He will govern under a uew constitution giving
than elected by tbe rank-and- Roberts, Racine Route %, a traditional items on moat want-for free.
him the power to dissolve the National Asaembly and nominate a
rue.
Filipino tables at Christmas.
Tbogpla Tlllll to Peace
relrlgerator.
tbtrd of the members of the parliament.
The old board meeting in
In tbe United States, traveThe nearnesa of Olrlatmas
Park was overwhelmingly re-elected by the 2,359-member
New York Mon~y and Tues- ~~':':i$.~=,;:~;::~~w:r-m~ lers jamined highways and a1ao turned antlw.- actlvbts'
National
Cclnference for Unification, South Korea's highest
day, claimed authority over
· tboughts to peace. The tblcaco political body under tbe recently adopted new constitutional law.
mion hiring and firing and
Puce Action Coalition and the Two of the 2,359 ballots were ruled invalid. The rest were for
voted Boyle a $50,000-a-year
Chicago Peace Council Park. Park was unopposed In his canclidacy. Voting was sUIJ
pension which Mlller vows he
picketed on street corners In needed to confirm his election witb til!! support of a simple
won't get. A Miller aide said
Chicago 'a Loop Ji'rlday night majority a! the conference delegatC!II from all parts o1 tbe
the ouster of the old board
MOSCOW (UPI )- And~ei N.
and
more picketing .wu country. But it was considered only a formality.
s lop
·
members puIs ..
uoe burden on Tupolev, one of the world
. od
.
KEY
BISCAYNE,
Fla.
scheduled
for
tonight.
them lo Iring any court action aircraft designers, d1ed t _ay,
"In thla 11888011 of peace, we
. .~
· a Tass news agency ed1tor (U P! ) - President Nixon
WASHJNGTON - 111E C08r OF LIVING Council has
m uoe ma11er.
'd
H
84
appointed
seven
persona
de4cate
OUI'Ie!ves to bringing handed last mlriute Chftstmas shoppers at Heck's, Inc., retaU
sa1 .- e was .
CHARGE DROPPED
Tupolev had designed Saturday lo be members of a about the total, uncondlliooal outleta In Ohio, West Virginia Kentucky some bargains. The
COLUMBUS (UPI) _ An everything from a wooden commission to review national wlthchwal of all United Slates counc:il, following an investigation by the Internal Reve~e
forces from Southeast Alia," Semce, found the stores to have unjustified price lncreues and
indictment was dropped monoplane to tbe world's first policy on gambling.
Nixon chose Charles H. CPAC said In a atatemslt.
Saturday against James Ed- supersonic jetliner, the TUI44.
ordered price rollbacks and reimbursement a! $2'18,000 to
Morin,
a
Washington
attorney
In
Los
Anlelll,
more
than
ward Moody, 31, Cleveland,
An editor on duty of
customen.
after undergoing a three-hour Pholokronika Tass, the phOto 1o be chainnan of the 15- three dozen Vlelllam Veterans
The reimbursements will be made In tbe fonn ot reduced
lie detector lest which included arm of the, officia l news member panel, which includes A&amp;alnlt the War launched a prices betw- now a. Jan. 2. Headquartered in Cbarlellon, W.
questioning about the Aug, 28 agency , ·said word had been four appointees ' by tbe HOUle three-day, M-mlle treck to Va., the chain operates atores Iii Belpre, Portsmoutll, Heath,
fatal shooting of Patrolman received of Tupolev's death, and four more by the Senate. protei! Clllltlnued U.S. military Athene, Circleville, Alliance, and .Lancaster, Ohio, as well ee in
Others appointed included lilvolvement In VIetnam.
Joaeph Andrew Edwards.
hut he had no detnils.
Weat Virginia, Virginia and Kentucky.
The charge was dropped. by
La8t montb, just before his James M. Coleman, prosecutor · The admlnlatratlon anFranklin County Prosecutor 84th birthday, Tupolev was or Monmouth County, N. J.; 1111111ced today that Prelideot
OOWMIIVS - THE OHIO DEPARTMENT a! Public
NiJan
would
order
I
ternGeorge c. Smitb after seeing personally presented his third David D. Dowel Jr., Massillon,
bom"'ft• of ·Welfare paid • • mWion for heellh care In flacal year tm -•
theresultsoltbetestglvenbya Hero of Socialist Labor medal Ohio. attorney; Ethel D. AileD; porary hilt In the
more 111111 the Jnv1ou1 ,ear, Director Charlie W: Balas
Philadelphia
councilwoman;
North
VIetnam
duriDC
a
aaid
SalutdaJ.
Generll boapllall received-.&amp; miWon, IIIII !he
Chicago expert, after an by President Nikolai V.
Joseph A. Glmma, New York Oll'lllmu I'"M fin.
earlier one by the l,llghway Podgorny.
nit altlll "'""' wa paid 1o pbJIIdanl, dentiltl, pbarmaellla,
The fDurtll Olrlllmla lblp. llborltorlll and elhlr •allb care agent~.
Patrol gave inconclusive - - - - - - - - - broker; Robert U.t, attorney ment
of mill from American
results.
·
Coat '""' lltlrGpolllln ROI[IIIal received the ·hfpllt
at India ria University, has general ~f Nevada; and prllonll'l al W. wiU arrive In
..
JDII&amp;
willltu ml"'m, QMnnati General HOI[IItal toeceltid
agreed to become head football Charles F. Phllllpa Jr., New Yen. A dlhption ol
IIIII Oldo 81111 Ulllwnlty IIOI[IIIal received tl.l
coach al · Northwestern profe ssor of economlc:l,
PONT TRADES JOBS
peace
acllvlltl,
Joan
""'""'
_
. . to 111111... aaid Gray Drq ..... IDe.,
"T
EVANSTON, Ill. (UPI)
University., it was announced Washington and Lee UnJver,
.•lty, Lexinglor!, Va.
11M&amp;, - ~ lrln&amp;, tbi mall tecelftd.,,lll,llleJqbrtiiMIIIII ..Idln It'll to a pbannacy.
John Pont, Qe.ad footbaU coach Saturday.

Top designer .
died in Russia Seven to study
gambling ways

I

U:,Y LEE LEONARD

needs trained personnel

ATHENS - Strategies for
implementation and recruitment of additional personnel to
serve ;handicapped children in
Southeastern Ohio were
presented. to the Services for
Handica'pp ed Children
Governing Board by SHC
Director Robert L. WeiQ·
furlne r al the board's regular
December meeting in .Atbens
Thursday.
The SHC proje.ct serves tbe
33 school districts in A!hens,
Gallia , Hocking, Jackson,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan ,
Noble, Perry, Vinton and
Washington counties In tbeir
efforts to provide appr~riate
educational opportunities for
physically, emotionally and
mentally handicapped boys
and girls.
Wtinfurtner said tbe SHC
project stall will work closely
witb tbe school districts In
screening and identifying ·
children witb handicaps and
applying lor units from tbe
Ohio Department of Education

GET SET FOR A

59e

AJAX
LIQUID
FOR DISHES
Qt. Bottle

l ·ib.

I I I I

49e

Pkg. •

TASTE O'SEA

Perch fillets
I

1-lb.
Pkg.

9-o•·69c
Pkg.

FOLGER'S COFfEE
2·ib.
Ca n

$179

3-lb.
Can

'2''

COLD POWER

DETERGE
3-lb. 1-oz. Pkg.

9

�•
15 - The S~day Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 24, 1972

14,:- lnellwlday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. ~.1972 _

_ _

r------- ---- ~

Ar
I ea i Program
'D
h
.,
1 eat s 1

••

~,.••

I

•

I

I

I

· Ruth 'Hudsoft
(

•

...

•

w

•

'

~"

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..•

••

••
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•

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BIDWELL RESPONDS -Citlzms of the Bidwell community Thursday responded to doorto-door canvassing for the Gallia County Volunteer Emergency Squad. A lotal of $351 was
collected by four residents who took Charge of the drive. The residents presented tbe money lo
· Bill Mltdlell, right, chairman of the emergency squad commi~tee. Participating in the canva8Sillg were, left to right, Yvoone Jacoba, Joanne Basa, Ethel Dewitt and Nora Knotts.

'

i Many

.

hurt in mass pileup

'

MACON, Ga. (UP!) ...state
police reported two peraons
•. ldiJed 111d injuries too nwne' I'OUI "tO COIIIII" Saturday In a
; Jllllllllve, dlalni'eectlon pUeup
of en ln both lanes 0t Int.entate Highway 75 north of

lbcm.
Tralllc aJans tbe busy route
1INc:ll ltretdlel Into Florida
- !led up for mDes for a)»ut
seven hours · before state·
trooper, IUCI:eeded Iii getting
the wreckqe cleared away
llld lrllllc lllll\'lng.
Itt e11e point, a can went out
for an ambulances llld wrecken Iii the MaCOII area.
In addltlan to the two deaths,
· the ..trol aaid numerous InjUries, "too many to count,"

•.

: Gen. Giap
' (Cclnlinued from page 13) '
: •'fill Dlldly iet, they aald, by a
• North VletDimese who op.
polld CGIIIQmauce a! the war.
Gllp, II tbe llellll-legendsry
, &amp;eneral wbo defeated the
Frelldl at Dlen Bltn l'llu In
ltM, IIIII Pmtlni an end lo the
FreDch ph.e oflhe Jndochlna
amlllcl.
In Plrll a NGrtb Vielnameae
peKe deh$11Wn epoiresm'l11
IIIII till~ of Gljlp'a.de,a~
... llllmlfaeCind by the
AmlrltU Cedrll lntelllgence

AIIIICY·

.

The apokesmen, Biked about
tbe clellb report, told UPI: "It
Ia ID out and out Invention of
the QA." A cleleptlon lpobaman had
coounei;Ud earlier: ''We do
not lltoop to deny thla product
ol the Amllrlcan psychological

warfare.''
The Hlnoliii!Wiagency VNA
reJeaMd an acCOUDt ot a viBit
by' Glap Friday morning to
mlallle Jalllldl crewaln Hanoi.
Acalrdlac lo the report, Giap
CIJIIIII'Ilulated the gunners for
llhoalnc down American wai-planle.

The U.S. command bad "no
CCIIIIIIIellt" on tbe 1111pp01ed

Incident.
Nd V~ leaders
menlioned In radio traffic
wtlbln North Vietnam are, as
in moat countries, usually
referred to by code names.
Theae names are changed
perlodlc:aJJy. Giap may have
Ileal referred to by such a
IIIJIIe and 10 identified by
South VI~ lnlelllgence.
' Glap Ia frequently quoted on
Radio Hanoi or by Hanoi's
Vletum Nt!WII Alllllcy, He wee
1110111 rec~~~tly quoted In a
llroldeall Friday as having
told an Army 2ah anniversary
celelntlon Thw-aday tbat ''the
American lmperhillsts and
llencllllen are Jos1ni and wUI
be dllfeated completely."
Glap - born Iii 1912 to a
flmll7 ol well-to-do peaaants in
~ provlilce, just
mrlll of tbe current boundary
betwwn North and South Viet-

Q...
nam.

He attended the same high
ICbool In the former imperial
c.phl of Hue thai had esrller
e.tr•"' Ho Chi MiDh and Ngo
1M DIIID, ieepedlwly the
llnl p; IMil al North and

' IDalll """'"' .
11t1r ....,., Jaw ln
F I Bt Jollied llo Cld Minh's

tt IP ' •

IIIOt-lll and
'I
I I dllrtow lillmber of
Ill• llMIHIIbla Communist

-~~~..,.. bid any fOrmal

~~~~~~r.~w~sw~,M

:

....... t ""•

up~

.~ · dultiiiWorld

Miller to
have been reported.
The first accident happened
about a.m.
by midday a open up
slate trooper at the Forsyth
barracks, north of Macon, said
there had been at least.
Union HQ
collisions.
5

and

20

Anti-hijack
costs study
is announced
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
( UF'I) - Tri-State Airport
officials
have
announced plans for covering some of the costs
involved in imple~nting new
anti-hijacking security
measures required by the
federal government.
Airport manager William
Ma:ys ilaid sponaors of Tri-State
will be asked to incre- ' an~
nual contributions to the field
when they meet here next
Wedneaday.
The 8p011801'8 include the city
ol Hunlinllton, the towns of
Ceredo, Kenova, Ashland, Ky.,
the Hunlngton Industrial Corp.,
and the counties of Cabell,
Wayne and .Boyd, Ky.
The security standards,
ca~ f~,earJiea: lbiiiDAllltllrby
TrlliiJ)QI'tatlon Secretary JOhn
Volpe, muat be operational by
Feb. 8.
Mays said costs will run a
minimum of $30,tioo annually,
and at least tbree full time
pollee offlcera will bave to be
added lo the airport staff. The
a!rport authority plans to ask
the 1973legi81ature to grant its
guards pollee powers, Mays
said.
·

Blakeslee has
Rotary program
MIDDLEPORT - Charles
Blakeslee conducted an
audience participation type
program on the significanCe of
Christmas following dinner at
Heath United Methodist
Chur.ch when the Middleport ,
Pomeroy Rotary club met
Friday evening. Harold
Hubbard, vice president,
presided in the absence of
President Gene Riggs.
Two .guests were Charles
Clarkson, a former member of
the club and resident of Middleport, now of Wisconsin, and
Allan Blackwood, son-in-law of
Hubbard. Ladles of the church
served the dlilner.

UMW satel y'
~

(Continued from page 13)
''Our safety today Is worse
Ulan It was 20 or 30 years ago,"
be added.
"lliltend lo sit down and talk
witb the coal operators and
exp~in to tbem what 1 lhlilk
ought to be dooe," Miller said.
" If they continue to react like
they have, then it's going to
become mandatory that we
provide safety.
"We may get Iii tbe position
where we couldn't care Jesa
about the federal Bureau of
Mines," Miller said. "Eitber
tbey do their job or we11 do it
for them ."
.He said a key to mine saleiy
was to penni! miners to strike
or otberwise leave tbe niines to
avoid dangerous working
conditions. He pdded that
"when you find an area of
Imminent danger, you Clllllot
wa!t for tbree or foil' mont111
for 110111e011e to move on It. It's
Ifill to te done then."
Under prernt union con:
tracts with mine operators,
ufllty Is an iasue for ll'bttrallon, but Miller laid "l don't
think an)' man olllbt to have to

m:bltrate a man'• life."

MASON - Mrs . Emory
(Ruth ) Hudson, 67, of · New
Cumberland, W. Va., died last
week from injuries in · an
automobile accident at New
Cumberland. Mrs. Hudson's
husband .remains in a critical
condition in a New tum berland
hospital.
The Hudsons were in a
Volkswagen when struck by a
traclor trailer,
Funeral services for Mrs.
Hudson were held Saturday at
1 p.m. at the Fields Funeral
Home in New Cumberland .
Among tbe survivors, in ad. dition to her husband, is a
daughter, Mrs. John (Evelyn)
McDaniel, of Mason.

Iva Simpk4ns
PT. PLEASANT ..:. Mrs. Iva

Gertrude Killingsworth
Simpkins, 70, 312 Second
Street, Point Pleasant, was
dead on arrival at Pleasant
Valley Hospital at 6:50 a.m.
Saturday.
She was born at Leon June
'!1, 1902 a daughter of the late
Richard Killingsworth and
Mamie Fielder Kiilingswortb.
Sur vivors include her

.

Santa came toJ King on ti~e

.

for IJ.andicap

by April 15, 1973 to flilance
special educaUoo claSIII'OOUlS
and •supportive services. The
State
Department
of
Education, in turn, will notify
local districts on the allocation
of special education units by
May 15, 1973 .
. "However ," Weinfurtner

said, "we intend to begin an
intensive recruitment drive 'in
January in order to fill tbe
units that are allocated lo Ibis
region.,' '
Besides finding qualified
teachers for emo!ionally and
meptally hand icapped

Postmen to

work late

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
. Postal Servlce.reported Satorday tbat regiooal Postmasters
general bave been authotlzed
to schedule delivery service on
Christmas Eve in some areas
where volume continues heavy
becallSe of late maUings.
Parcel poat : delivery was
expected Sunday In Cincinnati
and Columbua, tlllo.
In a statement, the service
said Christmas mall volume
was con'tinuing to rise at a rate
of 8'1. per cent over last year's ·
holiday crush.
·

The Postal Service Utristmas Communications Center
said 10.25 billion pieces of mail
were processed Iii time for
Christmas, witb poor weatber
.in the east and central regions
contributing to some delays.
"The worst winter weatber
of the century poses a big
problem in maU movement" in
the central states, said the
report.
Mail volwne in ihe East and
South was reported 11 per cent
higher !han last year at this
time.

children, Weinfurtner explained, recrili~f!ent wlll also
foc us on obtaining teachers for
children with · low-incident
handicaps - those children
·' who are auditorially or visually
impaired or !bose who are
crippled ~ and additional
school PsYchologists •
"At tl)is time there are no
low-incident units in this
region," Weinfurtner added,
"and of the 16 school
psychologist units our )1
counties were eligible for this
year, seven bad to be turned
hack to tbe state due to a lack
of qualified applicants. We're
unable to compete for school
psychologists with otber areas
in the areas of salary and
fringe benefits. ~ ·
Weinfurtner told tbe board
that school district plans from
the II county area to meet
provisions of Substitute Senate
Bill 405 were the most refined
and most complete of those
submitted to the State
Department of Education.

EM,?~~~i~~~ Your Wayne National Forest
~~~~~::~ E~~n:ieAu~~.:'ak~: !~!~t IRONTONDis~!:~~:ofthemost ~:~~.;, ~~tdl:./::~o~a~o:h~: ~~e

_·,;: _l:'~·_.:,_[i·!:

..

-,i_._i

$

M

:¥

World prepares to celebrate Christmas

ews .. in Briefs

protect both men and women.
The governor promise&lt;! to
press for such legislation ned
year·
.
King had to work for hiS' second present _ ,. a vote of confiden~ froni his union's execu·
live board.
·The fiery union chieftain denied after the four-hour closeddoor session of tbe 35-member
board that there was any strife.
. Ohio Politics '
But
a. post-meeting
examination of the room at tbe
which would have repealed Sheraton Hotel . revealed
Ohio's female protective labor shredded coffee cups and notes
· laws for finns employing less . . on tbe .tablecloths indicating a
. than 15 persons.
struggle between King and
King's union stubbornly ' Secretary-Treasurer Warren
fought the legislation for two J. Smltb.
'
yeats, even after a court ruling
Board Supports King
held . tbe protective litws un·
The only message King
constitutional for larger !inns. would give out for public
Giiligan's veto messagefoll- consumption was that the
owecl the reasoning of King and board had reaffirined support
otber union members - that for botb himself and Smltb.
legislation should be enacted to
Any attempt to replace King

witb Smith as chief lobbyist for was defeated that year in a bid
the union apparently went out for state-treasurer.
the window for the time be1·ng. N th te · his
·
ow e vo rs m rev1sed
Smith wo.uld have given the Senate district have defeated .
' a more
·
governors•' off1ce
sym- him, · making him tbe final
· 1abor dealings "loan scandal" principal to he
pa th et'1c ear m
witb the legislature.
turned out of public office.
Several ghosts of ChristA third skeleton in tbe GOP
mases past are watching ·as closet is still kicking around.
Ohio Republicans attempt 1o Thai would be state Rep. Robassemble a statewide ticket for ert E. Netzley, R-Laura, who
1974.
helped spearhead an anti.
One or tbe ghosts, Roger w.. esta blishment movement
Tracy Jr., may actually be on witbin tbe party and probably
the ticket. lie is interested in prevented the 1970 wounds
running again for auditor a · from healiilg in time to win tbe
position his father and gra~d, 1972 elections.
fatber both held.
Had Tracy won the auditor's
Republicans
in
the
race in 1970 over Democrat
legislature have left the
Joseph
T.
Ferguson,
Democrats a couple o( dandy
.Republicans would have
legacies
for the new year - a
controlled tbe Apportionment
chalice to get credit for
Board and probably tbe state
enacting a pair of apple pie and
House of Representatives next
motherhood 'bills.
year.
One which the Republicans
Another Republican spirit let slip tbrough their fingers
state Sen. Robin T. 'rurner R· was tbe P,roposal to lower tbe
r-~--~------------ Marion, apparenUy has b~n nge of adultbood from 21 to 18,
put to rest witb an ill-fated re- matching the voting age .
o • •
. election attempt.
The otber .point-maker for
Turner Turned Out
the Democrats, when tbey take
Turner, the only figure in tbe over the HoUse, will ·be enactstate "loan scandal" of 1970 ment of installment sales
.
.
..... :who actually admitted ac- protective clauses left out of a
•
cepting and spending cam- consumer credit "trap" bill
By Bob Hoeflich
paign donations from a Ibis year at the insistence of
questionable loan finding finn, finance lobbyists.
POr.{EROV- It's been a busy holiday season and now tbe
big day is just around tbe corner.
Personally, I'm green and I don't mean with Christmas. It's
commonly known as envy, For example, friends, Mrs.· Paul
Nease and her son, Dick, ·will be leaving Christmas Day .for a
beautiful vacation trip to Switzerland. All sorts of activities are
planned and they'D have a baU.
I'm a Utile green allOut Karen Griffitb, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs: Charles Griffitb, Pomeroy Route 3, and a junior at Ohio
LANSING, Mich. (UP!) ~ satisfied witb the $50,000. So
State. Karen will be leaving on De::. 27 for Pasadena and tbe
Rose. Bowl Parade and game. This is a part of her Christmas Officials declared a wilmer this morning I went to church .
Friday in the contested to thank tb•'Lard for what I've
from her parents.
.
Of course, it doesn't always take a trip to make a Big drawing of Michigan's $200,000 got and I came back home to
find out I got more money,"
Christmas, doe4 it? Sometimes, it's the litUe tbings tbat count. pre-Christmas "super lottery,"
Youknow,llkehealtb, which Is really notimportantuntil it starts· hut were unable 1o placate tbe' The confusion began Thursto fail.
·
.
loser with tbe $50,000 con- &lt;lay when lottery staffer
Gregory Gardner, acting
One of the happiest young people we know thi~ Christmas solation price.
emce·e at the Southfield
1'You11 be hearing from
season is Maureen Hennesay. Her mother, Phyllis, has been
· returned to ,the Hennesay home on Mulberry Ave. from the tne," Mrs. Betty Coleman told ceremony, read tbe number
Holzer Medical Cenier. Phyllis suffered a heart attac~ just a bit tbe officials wHen infonned or "9" upside down from a white
sheet of paper during tbe
after Mr. Hennesay's unexpected death and it was reaDy touch tbeir decision.
"I'm nottaking tbat $50,000," $50,000 drawings. He read il as
and go for a bit. Maureen 's so pleased to have her mother at
home an_d progressing. Health is playing a part in tbe Christmas the 42-year-Q(d registered
Mrs. Coleman was No. 9
of Racine's Harold Carnahan also. Isabelle, his wife, a very nurse from tbe Detroit suburb
Mrs.
Coleman was conplea5ant and popular lady, has been quite ill at the Holzer of Romulus told newsmen.
Medical Center and she is expected to get hack home for tbe "I'm going to get at least testant No. 9 and the $50,000
holiday,
$200,000.1'hey are going to lose prize should have gone to her.
Gardner doubled tbe trouble
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cohen, Butte~nut Ave.,l?omeroy, have if they don't give me that
when
he called off tbe winning
been bavjng a great holiday season and lncidentaUy, one of the , mOjleY ." 1
')be .~,000 goes to Slllnle~ .~,oqp~wnber: as a ''9:' when
gteate!ll•YIB1'3 of, thetr.JIIves.
'
·,
For example, one evening last week members of the Rutland K. Yao, an unemployed finan- it was actually ~ "6" and
Fire Department and "Santa" visited the Cohen's bringing a big cial analyst, who initially had declared · Mrs. Coleman tbe
box of fruit and' candies for tbe couple. The gift was in a(i- $50,000 winners as a result of a super winner. Yao was contestpreclatlon of Mr. Cohen's work in collectlilg and repairing toys 1o number-calling goof which , ant No.6.
"We are deeply sorry for tbe
give to the fire department's program to help tbe un- when compounded, resulted in
confusion which occurred at
derprivileged -during the holiday season. He's helped out for Mrs. Coleman being identified
the drawing," deputy lottery
about eight years. Incidentally, Mr. Cohen resided in Rutland as the big winner.
chief
Daniel Dolley said. "We
Yao, 58, of Dearborn, said
from 1897 to 1915 when he moved lo Pomeroy.
Die\ you know the Cohens observed their 58th wedding an- he's excited about winning tbe are human error which caused
niversary on Nov. 23? The couple delights in tbeir tbree grand- $200,000, but sympatbized with the confusion will not be
repeated ."
sons, 'John, Frank and Jim Sisson, whom the couple reared after Mrs. Coleman.
Dooley said he was posiiive
· the death of their daughter, Alice. John, Frank and Jim have
"Last night, l decided 1
tbe right winner had been
presented the Cohens witb nine greati!J'anddaughters.
didn 't rea lly care what
chosen.
"They keep us young," Mr. Cohen said.
decision was made. 1 was
"If there were any doubt in '
·The Cohens are naturally wrapping up plans for a big holiday
my mind thai nwnber six was
reunion.
not the actual winner of
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
So far as we know, everytbing_is relatively under control in
$200,000,
our decision might be
The Middleport E-R squad
providing Olristtnas for the underprivileged. The Meigs Indifferent," he said. "I have
firmary CbriBimas appeared to be Jagging a bit Thursday night, was called lo tbe Middleport
discussed our options with the
but, perhaps, by Ibis time tbings are inoking up. Hope so. Those busineSs section at 10:30 a.m. office of the attorney general
infinnary residents do ,get tbe biggest enjoyment out of the Friday for Mrs. Patricia
and with Gus Harrison, the
holiday season. By tbe way, if you haven'f seen the lilfinnary's Cleland, Langsville, who had lottery commissioner, and they
outdoor decorations, do drive by. This y,ear's effort certainly · become ill in her car. She was are in agreement witb this
taken to Veterans Memorial
seems tbe "best yet."
decision."
Hospital
and admitted.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall of the Cheshire area have cerialnly
been a help at the Infirmary Ibis' year. Mr. Hall telephoned tbe
infirmary to offer his help In providing a little brighter Christmas there. It all turned out that HaD agreed to purchase a
comfortable cbalr for both the living room of the men and. tbe
women. You can be asaured that the chairs will be more Ulan
well received. Certainly a generous gesture on tbe part of Mr.
and Mrs. Hall.
Middleport'sGene Grate has again done his '~hing" and his
products - homemade chocolate candy and hand decorated fruit
cakes -are in the mail or have been personally delivered. The
total this year was 110 fruit cakes and about 75 pounds of candy.
About 30 of the Grate clan will gather at Gene's home for diMer
NEW HOMES FOR SALE
on Christmas evening.
·
like I say, II has been a busy season. May I wish each of you
readers -and I hope tbere are several of you - the merriest
· BR, 2 baths,
-""m• tofal electric wiih Wlnlanison
·Olristmas ever and only the best in 1973.
·
Heating and Ceo
""""lng. General Electric

..-

Ofthe
Bend
.

11
.

InCh"'•

•.2 ....

.-

I

I

OPEN
9 TO 9 DAILY
CLOSED SUNDAY .
252 THIRD AVE.

SUPER MARKETS

ARMOUR*STAR SEL~CTED PORK
· we r~~erve fh• right ta limit

U.S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED

QUAnhl•t$0JI 1111 items. in this ld

Prices eltetti "e thru SJt Dec.

30. ltU. None sold tta. d~Jten:

1

lb.

Goof~d-up

lottery
loser quite angry

.DEVELOPMENT CORP.

SPLIT LEVEL

Fas oL

appliances, full•,
streets, 2'12 car garag•, •.

l

D

;aped, concr:ete dnve &amp;
lcony, lot 75x 17S, county

II-LEVEL .

'

j

get basic level jobs

Bedroom, 3 bath room s, 2 car garage, elec1ric forced air

1

STATE FARE·
WIENER OR
SANDWICH

dl~fng

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
The state could save nearly
John J. Gilligan instructed four $1.5 million annually Iii welfare
calMel members Friday to de- . payments by placlilg ablevelop a program to place quali- bodied persons in jobs, accord,
fled welfare recipients and ing to tbe governor.
other unemployed Ohioans Iii
Prospective employes would
basic-level job vacancies Iii tbe come from trainees in WIN,
Department ol Mental Healtb which tra}ns welfare recipients
Md Mental Retardation.
for employment, and from
Gilligan aald such a hiring among current state employes
program would have two pur- , who were hired under tbe led,
poses.
era! Emergency Employment .
"Not only wllllt improve sig- Act
nlficantly the quality of care
The state expects about aJO
we can o1er to palients In o..- vacanciee dw-lna the next
meatal tnatltullona," the three monlhl .
p.VIIInor aald, ''but It will aim GWipn requested the lllllapennlt ua to Irina new people tance lnlm the Me!UI Health
tn1o ow traltllnl JOCIIPIIIII, and Mlllllal Retardltkll, Jlur,
....., fll1ber ClltiDC Into lbe •• of !!',a• • ~ llenlcel,
wtlfare and unemployment Penonlal Dip
ancllbe
rolll'."
Public Welfare clepartmtnt.

•lmtut

electric"

"

with Williamson ~
"•ntral air conditioning.
General Electric'
D .arpeted, landscaped,
concrete drive &amp; streeb, ..
Jrage, dining balcony, ·
lot 9Sx175. county water, Tara .._ Ner system.

FIVE LEVELS

I

3 Bedrooms, 21 1 baths, 2 car garage. 12x.2 4 living room ,

total electric family room, fireplace .

Building Sites Available .
"'
Kingsberry Homes buill to Iii
specifications.
All Underground Utilities Provided.

,.

any

FOR INFORMATION OR APPOINTMENT
·367-7250
AOI)ISON, OHIO

~-----------------';.:·

. .-

29 c

POTAIO

12-oz. Can

1-lb. Pkg.

(Plus Tax
In W. ¥1.)

IMPERIAL

WARSAW FALCON
FRESH PACK

WHIPPED

pg~~~H

MARGARIIE
l·lb.

Tub

PICKLES

SMUCKER'S FEATURES
GRAPE,JELL Y •. . ..• ; ••••••••.•. ,.,._,., 69c
SWEET ORANGE MARMALADE . . "·" ·'" 39c
'CHERRY PRESERVES , , , •.••. ..• . ll·OL '"' 49c
PEACH PRESERVES •. , ••.••. . ... ll·oLm 48c
APRICOT PRESERVES •••• • •..•.. "·" ·'"' 45c

HOTDOGS
12-oz.

.

PARKAY SOFT

MARGARIIE

Ouart6
. 3~
Jar

49~

Pkg.

oL·

11

o

STATE

BEVERAG

Pkg. of 8

balcony.

SOUTHERN COLONIAL
fcS room. basement, total

J BR. 2112 baths.

For Slicing lb

il 1 or Salads

·THOROFARE
ALL FLAVORS

.UNS

furna ce ~nd air conditioner, family room, l.:t' x26' mast er

bedroom ,

lb.

Cli ISP GREEN HEADS
AT A SPECIAL LOW PRICE

ARMOUR* STAR - U.S. GOVT. INSPECTEO

wafer, Tara sewer system .

Welfare recipients will

GE

'

.-.2

I

Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (uPI) ~ Yuletide notes from the Statehouse:
F k
tr ran · . W. · King, con,
overslal president of tbeOhio
AFJ..CIO
gifts d . • had 8 couple of nice
ropped into his stocking
lat e Iast
week.
G
ov. Jolm J. Gilligan veloed
women's rights legislation .

Beat

WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ It
was tbe first Ume, after 24.
years as a coal miner, tbat
Arnold R. Miller ever stood in
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·::~;::::;::;.::.:=:.m·:-:-:·:·:-:·:·:·:~-~~::::::x.-::::::..-;:_~::::.-:z::~·.s·:~....~..w;-;-;·;·;·:·:•o.o.:·:·;~·=·:·:·:·:·:··:::~-::::·:o.:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·::::::::::.
husband,
'Roy
Simpkins;
ten
:::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;::::::::::~=~::;:;:;
•.•..•;~:;~:;:;:;:;:;3;:~~::'-!~1;::-! ·~~lij:.&amp;.1!:'1J.l:!;~:;:~:~;~*::;:::;::§~:;:~::::;:~;:~;:::;:::;~:;~:::::::::::::::::?.::;::~:::~:::::::::::~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:~ 1
the president's office at United
Mine Workers headquarters;
Now be was the president,
and more than a half century of
I
.1.1.1
rule of the union by tbe late Helen Bonecutter, Hilda ;~;;;;:
,13:.1 L. Lewis and Lewis' McCausland, all or Point ;:;:;:;;
By T. ALLAN WOLTER
was carried out with considerable ef- have been grappling witb Ws forest ;:;:;:;;
political heirs was over.
For most of the 300 miners
of tbe most significant conwho went to see Miller's and Opal H~ghes of Mason, two iirii critical areas o( the Fort;st Semce free blister rust to discover a certain chann tributlons to the ·program has come • .
•wearing-in Friday, It was the sons, Leroy Simpkins of West i:i:i:i: lmprovemenl p~ogr_am IS white pine, a about the currant's Americarr cousin, from the University of Wisconsin at .......
first time they had set foot Iii Columbia an~ Wesley Simp- · ;!f;' ~eg:dary spee~es 10 Eastern loggmg the common gooseberry bush.
Madison, where five apparently rust ,t.i_!_f:.
the building.
kins at home· one brotber the ::l;:;; IS ry.
Thus assured of afuture, blister rusts resistant white pines have been iden- ·:c
W. A. "Tony" Boyle, who Rev. Howard Killingswoth or iif!i Since tbe turn .of the ~ntury, spread and continued to produce tbe tified:
;;§;;;
headed tbe 'union for a decade, Point Pleasant; 38 grand- :i:i:i:i ho~ever, when a shipment of illfected spores which hungrily seek out the, The offspring from tbese trees, aloog ~~­
and whom Miller defeated in a children and 19 great- :;:;:;:; white pines ~ere !':"ported from white pine. Entering through the with hybrids from more Ulan 800 ·.;,····
court-ordered ele&lt;;tion, had not grandchildren.
i~~{ Europe, Amencan white pine stands •needles - turning them a vivid rust superior trees identified tbroughout tbe t~
nm an open administration.
Shewasprecededindeath by ;;:;:;:; a~rossthe country .~ve been plagued c~Jor - the blister rust fungus grows Region, are currently undergoing ):·:~
Denver C. Hartwick, of two daughters and one sister. i{:! wofltb blitsster rushith. Thisecjwr~a aocialaltediaearnetinseg inside the branches until it reaches the testing at tbe Oconto River Seed OrSmithfield, Pa., retired after 43
She was a member of tbe :;:;:;:;
sor • w c r
es
tree's single layer of living tisaue chard, where new expanded facilities ;:;§~ .
years in the mines, said "Tony Church of Christ in Christian :t:i: hosts to survive, and infec
. Is or
.
kills (cambium) just inside the bark, and have been constructed.
~-.::::
Boyle and all his stonn Union.
:i:i:i:i tbousands of acres of white pme an- .then proceeds toward the trunk. At this The first white pine tests at the ortroopers treated me like a dog"
Funeral services wiD be i:i:i:i: nuaUy. .
.
point it girdles the tree and, in effect, chard were conducted in 1969 witb a f~
when be had visited UMW Tuesday al2p.m. witb tbe Rev. ;:;;;:;: While bhster rust was excluSively a strangles lt.
total of 2,880 plants involved. However, ~::!:l
headquarters In the past.
James L. Buhn officiating in }iiii European disease, the carrier or
Efforts lo put tbe blister rust out· of the program is geared eventually to ~m
Now Hartwick sal at Boyle's the Wilcoxen Funeral Hqme in :;:;:;~ alternate host, 10 which II rested be- · business in tbe East· are concentrated atcommodate over 21,000 plants per '!~ 1
desk, waiting flir Miller to sit Pol9t Pleasant and blil'lal wlll :i:fi tween mea:Js of white pine, Wflll •the ' at the Oconto !liver Seed Orchard on ye~r. ~suits fri&gt;i!Ctti~Betitr!lttal' ti!stli;''''fl!
there; and miners and take place . in Suncrest , ;:;:;:;= black CIJITant., Initial efforts at .blister the Nicolet Forest, but this is, by no which mvolve exposmg the' white pine ;~~$
reporters (who aim bact' ~ot Cemetery.
i:i:i:: rust control m the Unl~ States, means, an exclusive· undertaklilg. For seedlings to rusk:arrying currant, will %j
found the premises open in the
Friends may call after 4 p.I)l. j~:i:; ther~fo~e, cons1sted simply .of , tbroughout mo6t of .this century, a wide be available for tabulation in 1972 or
past) roamed tbe headquar- today at tbe Wilcoxen Funeral ~i'::i: elmunatmg the black currant, ,which horizon of institutions and lnclividuals 1973.
jjf:~jj
ters.
.~;l~1;t~~~~m;~~~~~;~~jm~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~ml~~~~;;~~~~ll~~1~~i~li~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~r:~~~~mmM~U-;1Iili@llil~~~~~l;ml~~~~;~~*Ii~~r~®*~f:~~;l;l;~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~;ll~l~~~~;~~~I1f~~~~~;~~~~t~i~l~~;~~~lfW
"l feel proud," Hartwick Home.
said.
"This is the first time that
anY rank-and.file miner has
seen anything but tbe outside of
Ibis buUding," said Charles By United Press International to take one of the 380 extra airports to spend Christmas back CbriBimas Day in con- stations broadcast ChriBimas
Plemmons,~ miner from Local
junction with the collUllillee of music, including "White
Parisians deserted the "City trains assigned lo weekend witb their families.
1342 In Drakesboro, Ky .
-Terminals at Chicago's liaaon with families of service- ChriBimas," Australians seek
of Light" to spend the. duty to speed vacationers to
Miller said the UMW ''no Utrlstmas weekend In the Alps the Alps or tbe coast. ·
O'Hare lntern•tional Airport men detaliled Iii North VIet- relief from the beat at beaches
longer belongs lo one man." He or on the coast, and Americans
and swimming pools.
Parisians use any holiday for were jammed becaWle of the nam.
said "coal miners have been jammed airports and highways an excuse to beat it out of the holiday rush, as were most
His Holinesa Demetrios I,
Leaders Ask Bombing Hall
pushed around by dictators in their rush to spend . tbe city and, by rush hour Friday, major metropolitan airports
Leaders · ol 10 religious ecumenical patriarch of Conlong enough." And he promis&lt;'d holidays with loved ones as traffic on tbe outskirts of the across the country.
organizations asked evangelist stantinople, has sent Olrlstto spend most of his time in the people around the world pre- city snarled almost hopelessly.
Highways in many cities Billy Graham to implore mas greetings and blesalngs in
coal regions and In the mines, pared to celebrate Christmas.
In the Philippines, Aala's were jammed witb motortsts President Nixon to halt the an encyclical to tbe Greek
where Boyle seldom went.
Students and young couples only Christian country, wh6 decided to provide tllelr bombing in North Vietnam "in Orthodox Archdiocese of North
Then, after-his swearing In, balancing skis on their shoul- Christmas will be celelrated own holiday tranaporlalion.
the name df tbe Christmas and Soutb America.
Miller promptly fired au but ders flooded Paris' Gare ' de under martial law. A ~dnight
"Let us bear to !Dm, Instesd
Cash r~ers were ringing Christ."
four members of the 24- Lyon railway station, perhaps to 4 a.m. curfew lmpoaed by the merchants' favorite aong
of
gold, incense and myrrh, tbe
UtriBimas in Australia is
member executive board of the
authorities has forced the as last-minute shoppers celelrated much the same as confession of our perfect faith,
union and also dismissed ~&amp;.-~c:-~t':'eWCI 'IR''IJ'Sill88e8i traditional midnight masa on hurried to purchase Christmas Iii. America, but while tem- a blameless moral disposition
general counsel Edward L.
WINNERS NAMED
peratures border the · 120 and life, Jove and peace to one
Christmas Eve throughout gifts.
Carey and Suzanne Richards,
POMEROY - Whiners in Roman Catbolic churches In · In Jackaon, Tenn., needy degree mark. While local rndio anotber and to all."
executive assistant to Boyle. tbe llnal glye-away of tbe the country to be moved up two families were allowed to shop
Miller tben appointed ·his holiday promotion . by hours so churchgoers can be at a special toy store set up by
·-AW-'•'•':•~''"'·W-&gt;~
·~·.-.~y.-if;l
• •. ••
fl'i."i"'it'i ,•;tNJ'•• • o;. .v~o;.".•;; •"" ••'"''
..XVN~~.
own men to fill 14 of the new Pomeroy Merchants were home before tbe curfew Ume. tbe Salvation Army. Every
vacancies. Joseph A. "Chip" selected at tbe New York
ABright Note
needy family In the area which
Yablonski, son of Boyle's ' Clothing House Saturday
Martial law; however, aim applies to tbe Salvation Anny
mordered 1969 opponent, was altemooa. The winners are added a bright note for to shop Iii the store gets a
appointed to replace Carey.
Jennie L. Utile, Pomeroy Filipinos. Officials lifted a 2- certificate for each chUd lil the
By United Press International
Miller said tile ousted board Route 2, a otere&lt;J; Frances year-Qld ban.this year to allow famUy. The chUdren may then
SEOUL- PRESIDENT PARK CHlJNG..HEE Saturday won
members had been "illegally Alkire, Harrisonville, ll color Importation of such goodies ee drop by the 8\0re before
~lection to a new sll-yesr tenn in voting in which he was tbe
appointed" by Poyle rather television, and Randall L. apples, pears and grap ea
Christmas and pick a toy they ooly candidate. He will govern under a uew constitution giving
than elected by tbe rank-and- Roberts, Racine Route %, a traditional items on moat want-for free.
him the power to dissolve the National Asaembly and nominate a
rue.
Filipino tables at Christmas.
Tbogpla Tlllll to Peace
relrlgerator.
tbtrd of the members of the parliament.
The old board meeting in
In tbe United States, traveThe nearnesa of Olrlatmas
Park was overwhelmingly re-elected by the 2,359-member
New York Mon~y and Tues- ~~':':i$.~=,;:~;::~~w:r-m~ lers jamined highways and a1ao turned antlw.- actlvbts'
National
Cclnference for Unification, South Korea's highest
day, claimed authority over
· tboughts to peace. The tblcaco political body under tbe recently adopted new constitutional law.
mion hiring and firing and
Puce Action Coalition and the Two of the 2,359 ballots were ruled invalid. The rest were for
voted Boyle a $50,000-a-year
Chicago Peace Council Park. Park was unopposed In his canclidacy. Voting was sUIJ
pension which Mlller vows he
picketed on street corners In needed to confirm his election witb til!! support of a simple
won't get. A Miller aide said
Chicago 'a Loop Ji'rlday night majority a! the conference delegatC!II from all parts o1 tbe
the ouster of the old board
MOSCOW (UPI )- And~ei N.
and
more picketing .wu country. But it was considered only a formality.
s lop
·
members puIs ..
uoe burden on Tupolev, one of the world
. od
.
KEY
BISCAYNE,
Fla.
scheduled
for
tonight.
them lo Iring any court action aircraft designers, d1ed t _ay,
"In thla 11888011 of peace, we
. .~
· a Tass news agency ed1tor (U P! ) - President Nixon
WASHJNGTON - 111E C08r OF LIVING Council has
m uoe ma11er.
'd
H
84
appointed
seven
persona
de4cate
OUI'Ie!ves to bringing handed last mlriute Chftstmas shoppers at Heck's, Inc., retaU
sa1 .- e was .
CHARGE DROPPED
Tupolev had designed Saturday lo be members of a about the total, uncondlliooal outleta In Ohio, West Virginia Kentucky some bargains. The
COLUMBUS (UPI) _ An everything from a wooden commission to review national wlthchwal of all United Slates counc:il, following an investigation by the Internal Reve~e
forces from Southeast Alia," Semce, found the stores to have unjustified price lncreues and
indictment was dropped monoplane to tbe world's first policy on gambling.
Nixon chose Charles H. CPAC said In a atatemslt.
Saturday against James Ed- supersonic jetliner, the TUI44.
ordered price rollbacks and reimbursement a! $2'18,000 to
Morin,
a
Washington
attorney
In
Los
Anlelll,
more
than
ward Moody, 31, Cleveland,
An editor on duty of
customen.
after undergoing a three-hour Pholokronika Tass, the phOto 1o be chainnan of the 15- three dozen Vlelllam Veterans
The reimbursements will be made In tbe fonn ot reduced
lie detector lest which included arm of the, officia l news member panel, which includes A&amp;alnlt the War launched a prices betw- now a. Jan. 2. Headquartered in Cbarlellon, W.
questioning about the Aug, 28 agency , ·said word had been four appointees ' by tbe HOUle three-day, M-mlle treck to Va., the chain operates atores Iii Belpre, Portsmoutll, Heath,
fatal shooting of Patrolman received of Tupolev's death, and four more by the Senate. protei! Clllltlnued U.S. military Athene, Circleville, Alliance, and .Lancaster, Ohio, as well ee in
Others appointed included lilvolvement In VIetnam.
Joaeph Andrew Edwards.
hut he had no detnils.
Weat Virginia, Virginia and Kentucky.
The charge was dropped. by
La8t montb, just before his James M. Coleman, prosecutor · The admlnlatratlon anFranklin County Prosecutor 84th birthday, Tupolev was or Monmouth County, N. J.; 1111111ced today that Prelideot
OOWMIIVS - THE OHIO DEPARTMENT a! Public
NiJan
would
order
I
ternGeorge c. Smitb after seeing personally presented his third David D. Dowel Jr., Massillon,
bom"'ft• of ·Welfare paid • • mWion for heellh care In flacal year tm -•
theresultsoltbetestglvenbya Hero of Socialist Labor medal Ohio. attorney; Ethel D. AileD; porary hilt In the
more 111111 the Jnv1ou1 ,ear, Director Charlie W: Balas
Philadelphia
councilwoman;
North
VIetnam
duriDC
a
aaid
SalutdaJ.
Generll boapllall received-.&amp; miWon, IIIII !he
Chicago expert, after an by President Nikolai V.
Joseph A. Glmma, New York Oll'lllmu I'"M fin.
earlier one by the l,llghway Podgorny.
nit altlll "'""' wa paid 1o pbJIIdanl, dentiltl, pbarmaellla,
The fDurtll Olrlllmla lblp. llborltorlll and elhlr •allb care agent~.
Patrol gave inconclusive - - - - - - - - - broker; Robert U.t, attorney ment
of mill from American
results.
·
Coat '""' lltlrGpolllln ROI[IIIal received the ·hfpllt
at India ria University, has general ~f Nevada; and prllonll'l al W. wiU arrive In
..
JDII&amp;
willltu ml"'m, QMnnati General HOI[IItal toeceltid
agreed to become head football Charles F. Phllllpa Jr., New Yen. A dlhption ol
IIIII Oldo 81111 Ulllwnlty IIOI[IIIal received tl.l
coach al · Northwestern profe ssor of economlc:l,
PONT TRADES JOBS
peace
acllvlltl,
Joan
""'""'
_
. . to 111111... aaid Gray Drq ..... IDe.,
"T
EVANSTON, Ill. (UPI)
University., it was announced Washington and Lee UnJver,
.•lty, Lexinglor!, Va.
11M&amp;, - ~ lrln&amp;, tbi mall tecelftd.,,lll,llleJqbrtiiMIIIII ..Idln It'll to a pbannacy.
John Pont, Qe.ad footbaU coach Saturday.

Top designer .
died in Russia Seven to study
gambling ways

I

U:,Y LEE LEONARD

needs trained personnel

ATHENS - Strategies for
implementation and recruitment of additional personnel to
serve ;handicapped children in
Southeastern Ohio were
presented. to the Services for
Handica'pp ed Children
Governing Board by SHC
Director Robert L. WeiQ·
furlne r al the board's regular
December meeting in .Atbens
Thursday.
The SHC proje.ct serves tbe
33 school districts in A!hens,
Gallia , Hocking, Jackson,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan ,
Noble, Perry, Vinton and
Washington counties In tbeir
efforts to provide appr~riate
educational opportunities for
physically, emotionally and
mentally handicapped boys
and girls.
Wtinfurtner said tbe SHC
project stall will work closely
witb tbe school districts In
screening and identifying ·
children witb handicaps and
applying lor units from tbe
Ohio Department of Education

GET SET FOR A

59e

AJAX
LIQUID
FOR DISHES
Qt. Bottle

l ·ib.

I I I I

49e

Pkg. •

TASTE O'SEA

Perch fillets
I

1-lb.
Pkg.

9-o•·69c
Pkg.

FOLGER'S COFfEE
2·ib.
Ca n

$179

3-lb.
Can

'2''

COLD POWER

DETERGE
3-lb. 1-oz. Pkg.

9

�16- The Swiday Times -Sentinel, Sunday,

nee.24, 1972

tore

Eagles capture fourth loop win

amatic win

"·
J

'·'

PITTSBURGH (UP! ) ~
Super "rookie Franco Harris
caught Terry Bradshaw 's
desperlltiOn deflected pass on
the Oakland 35-yard line and
raced into the end zone for -the
deciding score ·with only five
seconds remaining Saturday to
lift the Cinderella Pittsburgh
Sleeleli"S to .a 13-7 victory over
the Oakland Raiders and a.
btirth in the . American Con; .
lerence Title game.
Harris caught ·a ball
'deflected by Ollkland's Jack

Tatum at the !'\aider 35 an&lt;)
raced down the left sideUne to
·complete a '60-yard play and
send the Steelers into next
Sunday's American Football
Conference title game against
today 's Miami-Cleveland
winner.
Harris' touchdown came one
minute and eight seconds afler
Ke11ny "Snake" Stabler apparently had given the Raiders
a dramatic 7-6 victory with a
3().yard touchdown sprint.
After the touchdOwn rim by

Stabler, who replaced Daryle
·Lamonica in the third periOd,
the Steelers took possession
following a touchback with 73
seconds remaining.
Bradshaw threw nine yards
to Harris on the Steeler 29 and
then hit Frenchy Fuqua with
an 11-yard pass to the Steeler
40 with 31 seconds left.
Two long desperation bombs
to Ron Shanklin and Joihn
McMakin were batted away
5etting up a fourth and 10
situation with only 211 .seconds .

left.
front offi ce boss, stormed down.
The Steelers' awesome front
Bradshaw under heavy through the press box
pressure, rolled to his .left and screaming at league officials . four' led by the inspirational
.unleashed a long bomb dow11 that the play was illegal but it · play of end Dwight White, who
field . Tatum, attempting br~ak got him nowhere.
turned in a brilliant effort
up the pass play, sent the hall . Davis sat sulking in a corner, despite a painful knee injury,
reeling back into the arms of his head in his hands for more had held Oakland's offense, the
Harris, who was fralting five than 20 minutes after the third most productive in the
yards behind the play. ·
conclusion of the game.
NFL !his year, _in check all
The rookie sensation from
What had seemed like a game.
Penn State, shoo-in for .Rookie valiant effort by Plttsllurgh's
The Sleelers' defense, which
of. the Year honors, raced steel-curtain defense appeared too · the league in sacking the
. untouched into the e.rid .zone. · to have gone to waste when quarterback and Interceptions
AI
Davis,
Oakland's Stabler marched 80 yards In 12 and tied for ·the fumble
managing general partner and plays for the go-ahead touch- recovery lead, forced four

f ...-"

all

bothered with flil week long .
completed only six of If passes
for 4~ yards against
devastating ~one coverage by
the Pittsburgh" s~condary .
Stabler, who relieved In the
third period, hit six of 12 for 57
yards.
Andy Russell had one In. terception, his first in two
years and linebacker Jack
H;~m .
added · a11other.
Safetymen(;len EdwBfds and
Mike Wagner had. fumbled
recove"ries·, with Wagner's
setting up Gerela 's second field
goal.

turnovers· and held Oakland's
talented rushing trio of Marv
Hubbard, Charlie .Smith and
•Clarence Davis to only 108
yards net rushing.
Hubbard, who gained 1,100
yards this season managed
only 44 against the rugged
~teeler defense.
Harris was the game's
·leading rusher with 64 yards
al\d Bradshaw finished with II
completions in 2S attempt.&lt;; .for
175 yards.
:· Lamonica, who had · been

BY KEITII WISECUP
RACINE - The Eastern
1'agles ripped off 14 straight
points at end of the 3rd "and
the beginning of the fourth
quarters 10 break Open a close
game against the Southern
Local Tornadoes and win 57-36
here Friday night.
The "Southern Valley Conference leading Eagles now
have a ~record in league play
and ate f-1 overall. The Tornadoes are 2-3 in lOOp action
aod 2-4 overall.
. Coa~h 81U Phillips' Eagles
stymied the smaUer Tornadoes
with a dogged full-&lt;:ourt man-

...,,.

...

SEO standings

to-man defense to hold
Southern to only 20points in the
first tbree quarters!
(.The Eagles were· on top all
the way; jumping out to a 5-0
lead in the first minute. It was
only 25-20 with four minutes
left in the third periOd, but
seven back-to-back twopointers in the next six minutes
made it 39-20. The cause of the
game-winning breakaway was
the Eagle press that forced
Southern into numerous turnovers in the six-minute span.
The . Tornadoes were not

bothered by the same press the
rest of the game.
Randy Boring, 1&gt;-9 senior
guard, ;md Alan Duvall, 6-2
senior forwa~. led the Eagles
with 14 points each. Duvall and
Bocing are the two returning
starters from Eastern's seclional championship team last
year.
Norman Curfman , a 6-0
junior forward , and Pete
Sayre, a 1&gt;-11 sophomore forward, paced the Tornadoes
with 12 each. Sayre played 3
quarters in the reserve game

I

and scored only two points,
then played his only eligible
quarter in the final period of
the varsity game and ripped in
12 points.
Mr. Sayre just might be In
line for promotion!
Duvall also paced the Eagles
in rebounding with II. Ron Hill
led Southern with 11 while Nick
lhle added eight and Sayre
five. The Tornadoes surprisingly oulrebounded the
Eagles 35-26.
Eastern connected on -27 of65
field goal attempt.&lt;; for a 42 pet.

average but made only three of
10 ·fr om the. foul $\ripe.
· Southern cashed in 13 of 44 field .
attempts for a cool 29 pet.
Coach Bob Ord 's Tonadoes
made 10 of 26 from the free
throw line .
In the preliminary r.eserve
game, Southern won its fourth
game in six outings, Jj.26 over
, the little Eagles. Mitch Nease
and Barry Theiss led Southern
with 16 and 10 respectively
while R. Orr and G. Bailey
topped Eastern with eight
. each.

MAKES CUTTING
TWICE-AI-EIIY
••

•

.•"'
ALL TOURNAMENT TEAM - Members of the AllTournament Team, selected by area news media following
the Second Annual Rio Grande College Holiday Invitational
Tournament, are pictured here with Redman Booster .

FRONT TRIGGER
Wendell Thomas. Left to rlght are Ron Lambert, iuo
G~ande! Mike Oden, Northwood ; Jerome Smyre, Concord;
Bill Smith, CollCord and Alfred Vance, West Virginia Slate.

'

For easier control ·ln
close quarters and '
tricky angles.

ACCEPTING THE 1972 Rio Grande College Holiday Invitational Basketball championship
trophy from Rio Redman Booster Wendell Thomas are Northwood's PhU Meyer and Mike
Oden . Northwood defeated previously unbeaten Concord, W. Va., Qlllege 84-77 for the championship at Lyne Center Friday night.

EXCLUSIVE TWIN TRIGG! R
DUAl CON IRfll m If M

REAR TRIGGER

Luck, God was

Makes faster work
of cutting f.irewood
or lumber.
"~,(,

!._'~';'{_ ·~I

with us--Harris
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - "It Harris said. "Actually, I was
"It's not often you get a
was a little bit of luck, and God ·supposed to be the blocker on chance when you're behind
was wjth ~- "
the pley. I went downfield with only a lew seconds left,.
', ,Tha~,, ..asJ the •• way.• ~ookle fafJher than ,us'lll\· ~,h tiJ\w ~ut,jYp fWd1~ ~Qilll. ,Ye~Q..¥eah,
Franco Harris "' surnffi'ed .'J'erry throw,Ima~,emylirea'fi. It was mJ&lt;: Digges! thrill."
up
tbe
Pittsburgh I 5aw the ball bounce off Tatum
Fuqua said he was dazed by
Steelers' 13 • 7 comeback and then l put my hands kind,of the collision. Asked if the ball
victory with five seconds low - !think around my knees . hit him first, Frenchy replied,
remaining in their American - and caught it.
"No comment."
Football Conference playoff
against Oakland Saturday.
It was a freak GO-yard touchdown pas" involving Steelers
Terry Bradshaw, Frenchy
Fuqua, Harris and Oakland
defender Jack T~tum that gave •
the Steelers a victory that
I
shocked even .the hometown
DETROIT (UPl) - Mickey Redmond scored
crowd of 50,350.
Bradshaw's pass was in- his sixth goal in five games Saturday and assisted
tended for wide receiver Barry on two others to lead the Detroit Red Wings to a 5-1
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER - NorthwoOd's Larry
Pearson but lt went to Fuqua, National Hockey League win over the Vancouver
Weber, a 6-5 junior forward from Seymour, Ind., was named
who
collided with Tatum and Canucks.
Most Valuable Player of the Second Annual Rio Grande
the ball squirted into the air at
~Uege Invitational Holiday Tournament following Friday
Goalie Roy Edwards of
the Oaklanct 35. lfarris copped Detroit didn't have a chance
night's championship game at Lyne Center. In two games,
the ball at the Oakland 42 and for a shutout. Vancouver's Defenseman Dale Tallon put
W~ber pumped In 51]!9intsforthe champion Blue Devils, and
sprinted down the left sideline Barry Wilkins put a screened the Cancuks in trouble right
w..s a controllln'g factor on both boards in wins over West
away when he drew a major
for the winning touchdown.
Virginia state and Concord. PresenUng trophy on right is Rio
shot past him from the point penally for highsticklng 59
"! just happened to be in the early in the second period for
Redman Boo:ater Wendell Thocnas.
seconds into the contest.
right place at the right time," his fifth goal of the season.
Delvecchio scored when the
Redmond flipped in his 19th game was 3:14 old and Redgoal of the season early in the mond scored 31 seconds after
opening period, converting the Tallon came out of the penalty
rebound of Ron Sl!lckhouse's box.
shot. Earlier in the period on a
Referee Andy Hellemond
power play, Atex Delvecchio called
two
tO-minute
had slid In his ninth of the
season after a shot by Redmond.
GALUPO!:JS - America 's players.
basket
must
be
taken
while
craziest and most t linun Fontaine slipped behind
Shaw Brothers bring their
predictable sport- Donkey l'ombination of circus at- sitting on the donkey. U fans the defense and converted a
' Basketball - will be featured mosphere and rodeo thrills \o are · looking for a fun-filled pass by Redmond with six
at Washington Gym , at town for the benefit of Blue evening for the entire family, minutes left In the second
they should come out and period to make It j.J. Red
Gallipolis, 7: 30 p.m., on Devils Booster Club..
"atc.h the local "cowboys" ·
Friday, Dec. 29. The teams will
The old saying, "stubborn challenge Pistol Pete, Sugar, Berenson scored his fifth of the
be made up of local basketball as a mule,"will be exemplified
season for Detroit ·and Marcel
Tornado, Zeb, Suicide, and ihe Dionne got his 15th while the
w,hen the local boys match wits rest of the donkeys that will be •
l).ed Wings had a two-man
with the donkeys. The odds are In the big game.
NBA Standings
advantage late in the game,
By United Press International that in most cases the donkeys
will win. The old rodeo days
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
will be brought to mind when
w. I. pc1. g.b,
the local Gene Autrys and Roy
Boston
27 4 .871
l\lew York
27 9 .ISO 2'h Rogers t&lt;.ke their spills and
Buffalo
9 24 .273 19
Philadelphia 3 32 .086 26 ·bounces.
There will be plenty of laughs
Central Division
family PICk
Touch.'·
w. I. pc1. g.b. lor the entire family during
Ballimore
18 u .563
Includes these
this !unfilled evening. ll is
Atfanla
19 IS .559
4 $111dwlthe$
really a lltUe different from
Houston
I~ 18 .AJ8 4
llld 4 Ordel'l
Cleveland
9 26 .257 10V&gt; regular basketball. Taking a
Wuttrn Conference
of fr111Ch lries.
shot at the buk~t. when the
MillwHt Division
w. I. pet. g.b. donkey decides to go the other
Milwaukee
24 9 .727
Chi~go
21 11 . ~56 2•.; way, or decides you have been
t(C.Qmaha
20 18 .526 6'12 on his back too long, can be
O.frolt
15 17 .469 8V&gt; very dilficult. Every shot at the .
Pocllic Division
Vf. t: pet. g.b.
loiAngeles . 27 6 .818 Golden State 20 11 .645 6 Col East 82 Toledo Scott 75
Plloenlx
17 18 .46 ll'h Col. Watterson 67 Big Walnut
PICIIfsuoNAL IIAI,I. FITTING,
SMilie
10 28 .263 19V&gt; 62
DIIUINI, I ' INSTlUCTION AVAILAIU
PorltllrMi
• 27 .229 20
PHONE
Clrclevl ~ le 73 Teays Valley 66
Pridly'a ~"'
• SHCIM. IATD TO:
Col.
St.
Charles
62
Gurnsey
Aflanr. 110 Buffalo 109
CIIUICII GIOUPS, P.l.lTlES.
Catholic 44
446-3362
S1VDINTS.,
8oston Ill KC-Omw 90
New Albany 65 Col. Academy
53
lltw
~~~levellnd
Detrolll
tilt t7 17
Springfield
Catholic 51 Piqua
"All Ne"' AMF Equipment"
+louttlllt I I lit 1.03
47
t!lii~JOtntM l I fbt ~ 110
Boniamln Logan 72 Grenon 63
Upper Rt. 7 Kanauga, Ohio
c;~to 127 Porllllid 97
Loveland
86
Deer
Park
-IS
Oni1 g1mes ICiitdultd I
Sycamore 74 Mlilord SO

SOUTHERN'S Ron HID (44) leaps high into air In an
effort to block Shot of Eastern's·John Shee~ (35). Eastern
won the SVAC game, 57-36. (Leo Hlll photoa).

•..

ALL GAMES
Team
W L P OP
Gallipolis
6 o 399 m
.Waverly
l 0 410 283
Portsmouth
6 1 -183 43'1
Athens
4 2 342 302
Soulh Point
l 3 S76 444
Logan
4 J 472 424
'
Chesapeake
3 J :142 347
Fed-Hocking
3 3 319 349
VINTON - Jamie Lafon, :;.
Ironton
2 4 372 348
Meigs
2 4 352 383 11 senior guard, continued to be
Jackson
1 6 363 SOl the leadi11g scorer In the
Wellston
o 6 305 520 Southern Valley Athletic
· Friday's Results:
Portsmouth 83 Washington CH Conference here Friday night
64
in leading the Synunes Valley
Federal-Hocking S8 Ross SE 47 Vikings to an 81-67 victory over
New Lexington 64 Logan 63
Portsmouth East 69 Jackson 54 the North Gallia P~ates .
.Aiexa.nder 1:14 Wellston ss
Lafon had been averaging 17
!Saturday night's Athens.
Lanci!!ster,
Ironton-Ports. points In his two other league
mooth, Federal -Hocking . g&lt;.mes. He . scored 20 points
Miller games not Included In Friday night on seven field
all.games standings) .
goals and ~ix free throws.
Thursday's Games:
Athens af Parkersburg
Teammate Rich Corn took high
Waverly at Portsmouth
scoring
honors with 24 points.
Friday's Game:
South Point at Meigs
Three other Vikings · hil the
SEOAL VARSITY
Team
W L ,p OP
Waverly
4 0 331 220
Gallipolis
4 o 264 200
Logan
3 1 273 241
Athens
3 1 237 197
Ironton
1 3 240 233
Meigs
1 J 229 276
Jackson
0 4 224 312
wellston
0 4 201 320
TOTALS
16 16 1999 1999
SEOAL RESERVES
NEW LEXINGTON - Jim
Team
W L P OP Middaugh's 20-foot jumper
Logan
4 0 202 140
Gallipolis
3 1 152 109 from the top of ihe foul circle
Waverly
3 1 176 W
with four seconds remaining
Athens
3 1 168 135
Ironton
2 2 153 156 gave host New uxlngton a
Meigs
1 3 w 165 thrilling 64-63 upset victory
Jackson
o 4 139 185
. Wellston
0 4 89 189 over the Logan Chieftains in a
basketball game
TOTALS
16 16 1220 1220 non-teague
.
SEOAL FROSH
here Friday night.
Team
W L P OP
The deleatlefl Logau with
Jackson
4 1 243 208
•• season markTh
Gallipolis
4 1 223 154
a .....
.
e
Logan
J 1 151 121
Panthers upped their record
Waverly
2 2 189 141
to 4-3.
Ironton
2 2 121 156
"
Ne~'
·•} g•-•
I ""d'bff ,._
Athiini'
·· · 1 3 ucr 135
"""An
wn urn""
w
Meigs
1 3 123 ISO an 13-12 first period lead, and
Wellston
0 4 101 232
36-28 during the
Totals
11 17 1297 1297 was .on lop
.
.
Wednesday's Results:
halftime
mtermlss10n.
Jackson 47 Gallipolis 41
Midway in the third periOd,
Ironton 46 Wellston 35
New J.,exlngton increased its
lead to 14 points, 44-30,
The Chiefs finally found the
range and came storming back
HELP ENLISTED
to take a 61-60 lead with I:10
DES MOINJ':S, Iowa (UPI)
-Bill StanfiU, deputy commis- left in the game on two straight
sioner for the Amateur Athletic jumpers by Jim Pierce.
Log"an regained possession,
Union foc Iowa and a member
and
began stalling. Randy
of the AAU National Board,
said Friday that his group has Norris ssnk two free throws
enlisted the help of President with 28 seconds left to give the
Nlxon and Vice President Chiefs a 63-60 lead.
Fred Ansel worked unAgnew in trying to restore the
Olympic medals and Olympic . derneath for a bucket with 10
records of the late Jim Thorpe. seconds left to cut the Chiefs
lead to one, 63-62.

I

!.

'

r
•

f•
[•..

l

TM Trademark of HomeUte,
a dhtlslon ofTextron Inc.

RIDENOUR

Redmond paces

Donkey basketball game
scheduled December 29

'

Parts and Service
John Ridenour
Chester, Ohio
RUNNERUP AWARD for
the Second Annual Rio
Holiday Invitational
.Basketball Tournament is
accepted here by Concord's
Jerome Smyre from Rio
Redman Booster Wendell
Thomas. Smyre tallied 44
. points in two tournament
games.

misconduct penalties later in
the game. One of them was on
Henry Boucha, whom Talton
inflicted a six-stitch cut above
the left ear in the first period,
and the other on Tallon for
protesting Dionne 's goal.

ot
~

by REDMAN IIDUSTRIES

5-A-V-E,"on EITHER
OF THESE 2 MODELS

1

~
~~.
"
. NICK lble (34) altemJ&gt;ts Short jumper against Eastern in
' fN AC game played at 1'\acine Friday. Lookmg on is
Eastern's Randy Boring (33).

(1) ELECTRIC (1) GAS ~r FUEL

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Rio JV's are

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11 \

UNIQUE FlOOR PLAN~LASJ
TWO AVAILABLE. SAVE!
SEl IT TODAY AT JOHNSON'S
Delivery 1:! Sn-up f'ree

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HRS: Mon. thru Friday 9-8

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EvePY Sund&amp;Y

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II

SUPPLY

Red Wings win

Sat. 9-5
Oosed on Sunday '

* Ta•ru 6 Tert J Trill••• *

(ALL DAY)

~ 2-1
•

on year

•

, RIO GRANDE - The Rio
'Grande JV basketball team
~on two of Its first three games
))rior to the holiday vacation to
begin the 1972-73 season. All of
IJ1e games were played at Rio
prande's Lyne Center.
: In their first game, the
jtedmen were ,edged in the
~omecomlng
game
by
Wilberforce, 81-79.
'• Rio Grande later evened •Is
record at 1-1 with an exciting
as-83 win over the Ohio
University • Chilllcothe br~nch
as Rio's Jolm Skagg.s scored
the winning basket with just
seconds left In the game.
The Redmen then captured
\lleir second win of the season,
87-63, over Walsh. Walsh led 3633 at the half before Rio erased
the "Cavallers'load enroute to a

.

vlctary.

Rio

GALUPOl,S,

' !
double figure mark . Dave
.Junfee, 5·9 senior, who
had been averaging , 13.5
points per game added
19 points; Phil Robinson,
the league's second best
scorer, canned· II points.
Robinson Is nursing -a bad ·
ankle which limits his mobility .
Dave Robinette, 6-2 junior
forward, continues to be North
Gallia's best scoring threat. He
canned 19 points In pacing the
Pirates. T. J. Robinson, li-9
senior guard, had 15 points.
Two 2S point quarters proved

to be the clincher for Coach
Wayne White Vikings.
The Lawrence Countlans led
18-16 going into the second
period but outscored the
Pira~es. 25-10, in laking a 43-26
lead at the half.
The first period was a seesaw affair with both sides
hitting over the zone. T. J.
Robinson led the "rtrate attack
while Rich Corn, 5-ltt ·senior
and Lafon paced the Vikings.
Lafon, Corn, Dunfee and
Robinson were especially hot .
during the second and third

New Lexington edges
Logan Chiefs, 64-63

•l•

Grande had eleven
players ICill"~ against Walsh.
Jay Pendleton ended the game
with 21. TCIID Smith flnlsbed
with It lllld Leslie Ware had 10.
WQII wu paced by Gene
FrltiUrt'a 2a points, Jim

r.

Lipnickey scored 13, and Joe
KorOde had 10.
The Rio JV team Is Idle until
January 12th and 13th. The
Redmeo wilt travel to Canton,
OhiotomeetWalshand Malone
colleges.
REDMEN NOTES : The
·eight new members of the
Redmen
Booster
Club
Executive Committee are : Dr.
James Dailey, Bob Sawldcrs,
Harold
Wiseman,
Ike
Wiseman, Merril Grodin,
Wendell Thomas, Lowell
(Buzz ) Call and Carrell
Waugh.
Rio varsity captain Ron
Lambert of A-lexandria,
Virginia
and
varsity
~ heerleader Sheila
Prill
celebrated birthdays Dec. 19.
The Rio Grande varsity
travels to Findlay, Ohio Dec. 27
and 28 lor the Findlay
BOOsters' Club Tournament.
Rio Grande playa Erskine and
Findlay meets Babaon College
in first round games.

New uxlnctoa wenllnlo a
full court press. l..ogan't Jim
Kemper tried 1o can time out
uoder "the Panthers' boop,
but the officials apparently
did 1101 see Kemper' a effort.
Thus, New Lex was awarded
the ball under ill own bucket
with eight secondslefl. Thea
came Middaugh's game·
w[nnlng shot from an Inbounds play,
Logan was ln foul trouble
lc
• h '!' ·"'
.
Threa
wroug
ou we game.
LHS regulars, Campbell,
Norris and Culbertson aU had
•
three personals early in the
first half. The Chiefs, on the
other hand, had only one oneand-one foul shooting situation
during the entire game. Logan
was whistled for 21 personals,
New Lex eight.
Logan hlt 30 of 74 field goal
attempts for 40.5 pet. New Lex
hit 27 of 64 from the field for
42.2 pet. Logan outrebounded
the host Panthers, 44-21.
Sophomore Chuck Kemper led
Logan with 12 rebounds. Mitch
Wright, also a sophomore,
hauled in nine.
New ux was 10 of 23 at the
foul circles, Logan was. 3 of 4.

Alexander stuns Wellston;
Jackson drops s~th tilt
WELLSTON - Visiting
Alexander shot a sensational 7G
pet., from the field, &amp;I of 68,
and stunped the Wellston
Golden Rockets 136-55 In a nonleague basketball game here
Friday night.
The victory left the Class AA
Spartans with a :HI season
mark. The Rockets are now ()-6
on the year.
Alexander led 32-~, 68-20 and
103-33 at the wuarter marks.
Two substitute players
wound up as the game's top
I
scorers for the powerful
.Spartans. Steve Thomas had 25
and Ted Gilkey 23 points .
Richard White added 17, Hank
Tribe 16 and Steve Brown 14.
For the Rockets, Dave
Souders tossed In ai and
Charles ' Snare added 16.
Wellston was 2i of ~ from the
field. WHS was 13 of 28 from
the foul circles, Alexander 32 of
42.
AHS won the reserve game,
51-41.
By Quarters:
Wellston .
9 11 13 22- 55
Alexander
32 36 35 33-136

visitors stormed to a 35-20
halftime advantage . Portsmouth East led 51-41 after
three periods.
For East, Tim Coey and
Mark Meason each tallied 14
points. Mike Clausing and John
Toppins each had 12.
One unusual note of Interest.
!'\andy Warrington, who played
four SEOAL games with
winless Wellston, has transferred to Jackson. Warrington
tallied six points in a losing
cause for the lronmen.

Five Chiefs linllbed In
double llgurea, led by
Plerte'al5 points. Middaugh
led the winDers with 31.
Logan wiD be -Idle unlll the
Chiefs' Jan. 5 trip to Gallipolls.
Box score:
LOGAN (63)- Pierce 7-1-15; .
Kemper 6·0·12; Norris 5-2·12;
Wright 5-0·10; Culbertson 5·0·
10; Campbel\2-0-4. TOTALS 30.
3-63.
NEW LEXINGTON (64)
Epllano 6·2·14; MlddauRh 14-l·
31 1 An,.l 2-3·71 Poling 1-2-4;
Wycklnskl3·0-6
; Gregory
TOTALS 27-10,·64.
. . •1.0·2.
Br Qvortors:
12 16 16 l9-6J
NL911an
ew Lex
18 18 12 26-.14
ReserYes - New Lex 35,
Logan 30.

l

.

,
By

TEUY '
quarters. ,Symmes Valley .
worked Its fast break to near
perfection. When the Pirates
stopped it, SV hit over the zone.
Symmes Valley sank 34 of 75
field goal attempts (or 45 pet.
and 13 of 20 free throws. Coach
Jim Foster's Pirates hit 29 of 67
floor shots for 43 pet. and nine
of 21 from the charity line.
North Gallla held · a 42-38
rebounding advantage with
Keith Weddington, 8-2 junior,
grabbing 18 rebounda.
North Gallia took the reserve
game, 37-27.
Greg James, a freshman, led
the winners with 1~ points, ·
Terry Pine had nine for
Symmes Valley,
The victory pushed Symmes
Valley's league record to 2-1
and dropped North Qallla Into
a tie with Southern. Both teams
have 2-3 league slates.' ·
North Gallla will battle
Hannan Trace at 7 p.m. Friday
In the opening game of the
Gallla County Holiday Tourntmentat Rio Grande College,
SYMMES VALLEY (121 DuniN 1·3·19; Corn 12-0·24 ;
Iafon 7-6-20 ; Webb 1-1·3;
Robln'O!\ 5·1-111 S.nnett 1-1·31
Quesenberry ).J.J. Toto Is 34·13·
81 .
NORTH GALLtA (671 Weddington 1-2-4; Robinette 7·
~· 19; Mlllor H -61 Robln1100 7-1 ·
151 Payne 2-0.4; lOCNift 3-0·61
James 3-0:.6:' Stout 2· f-!1 Smith
1-0-2. Totals 2f-f.f7,
8y Quortors:
Sym. Valley
18 25 25 13-81
North Galllo 16 10 20 21~7

'
In many palaces,
during
the medieval egos, the
collings were the most
note-wort~y thing In the
room . ~Y were either
timbered or vaulted
showing exposed ·con·
slructlon which preHnltd
a ceria in decorative etfect,

·Bn.d

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care

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THE

Steve Sturgill, POrtsmouth's
outstanding player , missed
Friday's game as a result of
illness.
East hit 33 of 61 from the field
for 51 pet., and was 3 of 5 from
the foul circles. Jackson was 21
of 6llrom the fioor, good for 34
pel The Ironmen were 12 of 22
at the foul circles.
East won the reserve game,
45-36.
By Quarters :
Jackson
&amp; 14 21 1~
East
8 'll 16 18--69

ii""== ..,..ow.ao.ooo ....-..."

OR =

JACKSON - Visiting Portsmouth East handed Coach AI
Berger's fighting Jackson
lronmen their sixth loss In
seven starts here Friday night,
89-64.
After holding Eut to a
narrOII' 8-f lead following dne
period of play, the down-river

Neither team plays until Jan .
5 when the Eagles .will try to.
put a stronger hold on first
plaee with a meeting against
tough Hannan Trace at Mercerville. Southern will he hOme
against the Symmes Valley
Vikings.
EASTERN (57) - Dill 3-1·7,
Boring 7-0-14, Duvall 7,0.J4,
Spencer 3·1·7, Cross 1-0·2,
Sheets 3-1-7, Atherton 1-0-2,
McCoy 2 ·0· ~. Totals 27·3-57.
SOUTHER.N (;,6) - lhlel·O·
2, Curfman S-2·12, Ord 1-0-2;
Hill 1·4-6, Theiss 1-0-2, Sayre 4&lt;
4-12. Totals 13-10·36.
.
Eastern
15 8 12 22-57
Southern
9 7 4 16-J.\

Symmes Valley captures
81-67 victory over NG

•

.I

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GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

�16- The Swiday Times -Sentinel, Sunday,

nee.24, 1972

tore

Eagles capture fourth loop win

amatic win

"·
J

'·'

PITTSBURGH (UP! ) ~
Super "rookie Franco Harris
caught Terry Bradshaw 's
desperlltiOn deflected pass on
the Oakland 35-yard line and
raced into the end zone for -the
deciding score ·with only five
seconds remaining Saturday to
lift the Cinderella Pittsburgh
Sleeleli"S to .a 13-7 victory over
the Oakland Raiders and a.
btirth in the . American Con; .
lerence Title game.
Harris caught ·a ball
'deflected by Ollkland's Jack

Tatum at the !'\aider 35 an&lt;)
raced down the left sideUne to
·complete a '60-yard play and
send the Steelers into next
Sunday's American Football
Conference title game against
today 's Miami-Cleveland
winner.
Harris' touchdown came one
minute and eight seconds afler
Ke11ny "Snake" Stabler apparently had given the Raiders
a dramatic 7-6 victory with a
3().yard touchdown sprint.
After the touchdOwn rim by

Stabler, who replaced Daryle
·Lamonica in the third periOd,
the Steelers took possession
following a touchback with 73
seconds remaining.
Bradshaw threw nine yards
to Harris on the Steeler 29 and
then hit Frenchy Fuqua with
an 11-yard pass to the Steeler
40 with 31 seconds left.
Two long desperation bombs
to Ron Shanklin and Joihn
McMakin were batted away
5etting up a fourth and 10
situation with only 211 .seconds .

left.
front offi ce boss, stormed down.
The Steelers' awesome front
Bradshaw under heavy through the press box
pressure, rolled to his .left and screaming at league officials . four' led by the inspirational
.unleashed a long bomb dow11 that the play was illegal but it · play of end Dwight White, who
field . Tatum, attempting br~ak got him nowhere.
turned in a brilliant effort
up the pass play, sent the hall . Davis sat sulking in a corner, despite a painful knee injury,
reeling back into the arms of his head in his hands for more had held Oakland's offense, the
Harris, who was fralting five than 20 minutes after the third most productive in the
yards behind the play. ·
conclusion of the game.
NFL !his year, _in check all
The rookie sensation from
What had seemed like a game.
Penn State, shoo-in for .Rookie valiant effort by Plttsllurgh's
The Sleelers' defense, which
of. the Year honors, raced steel-curtain defense appeared too · the league in sacking the
. untouched into the e.rid .zone. · to have gone to waste when quarterback and Interceptions
AI
Davis,
Oakland's Stabler marched 80 yards In 12 and tied for ·the fumble
managing general partner and plays for the go-ahead touch- recovery lead, forced four

f ...-"

all

bothered with flil week long .
completed only six of If passes
for 4~ yards against
devastating ~one coverage by
the Pittsburgh" s~condary .
Stabler, who relieved In the
third period, hit six of 12 for 57
yards.
Andy Russell had one In. terception, his first in two
years and linebacker Jack
H;~m .
added · a11other.
Safetymen(;len EdwBfds and
Mike Wagner had. fumbled
recove"ries·, with Wagner's
setting up Gerela 's second field
goal.

turnovers· and held Oakland's
talented rushing trio of Marv
Hubbard, Charlie .Smith and
•Clarence Davis to only 108
yards net rushing.
Hubbard, who gained 1,100
yards this season managed
only 44 against the rugged
~teeler defense.
Harris was the game's
·leading rusher with 64 yards
al\d Bradshaw finished with II
completions in 2S attempt.&lt;; .for
175 yards.
:· Lamonica, who had · been

BY KEITII WISECUP
RACINE - The Eastern
1'agles ripped off 14 straight
points at end of the 3rd "and
the beginning of the fourth
quarters 10 break Open a close
game against the Southern
Local Tornadoes and win 57-36
here Friday night.
The "Southern Valley Conference leading Eagles now
have a ~record in league play
and ate f-1 overall. The Tornadoes are 2-3 in lOOp action
aod 2-4 overall.
. Coa~h 81U Phillips' Eagles
stymied the smaUer Tornadoes
with a dogged full-&lt;:ourt man-

...,,.

...

SEO standings

to-man defense to hold
Southern to only 20points in the
first tbree quarters!
(.The Eagles were· on top all
the way; jumping out to a 5-0
lead in the first minute. It was
only 25-20 with four minutes
left in the third periOd, but
seven back-to-back twopointers in the next six minutes
made it 39-20. The cause of the
game-winning breakaway was
the Eagle press that forced
Southern into numerous turnovers in the six-minute span.
The . Tornadoes were not

bothered by the same press the
rest of the game.
Randy Boring, 1&gt;-9 senior
guard, ;md Alan Duvall, 6-2
senior forwa~. led the Eagles
with 14 points each. Duvall and
Bocing are the two returning
starters from Eastern's seclional championship team last
year.
Norman Curfman , a 6-0
junior forward , and Pete
Sayre, a 1&gt;-11 sophomore forward, paced the Tornadoes
with 12 each. Sayre played 3
quarters in the reserve game

I

and scored only two points,
then played his only eligible
quarter in the final period of
the varsity game and ripped in
12 points.
Mr. Sayre just might be In
line for promotion!
Duvall also paced the Eagles
in rebounding with II. Ron Hill
led Southern with 11 while Nick
lhle added eight and Sayre
five. The Tornadoes surprisingly oulrebounded the
Eagles 35-26.
Eastern connected on -27 of65
field goal attempt.&lt;; for a 42 pet.

average but made only three of
10 ·fr om the. foul $\ripe.
· Southern cashed in 13 of 44 field .
attempts for a cool 29 pet.
Coach Bob Ord 's Tonadoes
made 10 of 26 from the free
throw line .
In the preliminary r.eserve
game, Southern won its fourth
game in six outings, Jj.26 over
, the little Eagles. Mitch Nease
and Barry Theiss led Southern
with 16 and 10 respectively
while R. Orr and G. Bailey
topped Eastern with eight
. each.

MAKES CUTTING
TWICE-AI-EIIY
••

•

.•"'
ALL TOURNAMENT TEAM - Members of the AllTournament Team, selected by area news media following
the Second Annual Rio Grande College Holiday Invitational
Tournament, are pictured here with Redman Booster .

FRONT TRIGGER
Wendell Thomas. Left to rlght are Ron Lambert, iuo
G~ande! Mike Oden, Northwood ; Jerome Smyre, Concord;
Bill Smith, CollCord and Alfred Vance, West Virginia Slate.

'

For easier control ·ln
close quarters and '
tricky angles.

ACCEPTING THE 1972 Rio Grande College Holiday Invitational Basketball championship
trophy from Rio Redman Booster Wendell Thomas are Northwood's PhU Meyer and Mike
Oden . Northwood defeated previously unbeaten Concord, W. Va., Qlllege 84-77 for the championship at Lyne Center Friday night.

EXCLUSIVE TWIN TRIGG! R
DUAl CON IRfll m If M

REAR TRIGGER

Luck, God was

Makes faster work
of cutting f.irewood
or lumber.
"~,(,

!._'~';'{_ ·~I

with us--Harris
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - "It Harris said. "Actually, I was
"It's not often you get a
was a little bit of luck, and God ·supposed to be the blocker on chance when you're behind
was wjth ~- "
the pley. I went downfield with only a lew seconds left,.
', ,Tha~,, ..asJ the •• way.• ~ookle fafJher than ,us'lll\· ~,h tiJ\w ~ut,jYp fWd1~ ~Qilll. ,Ye~Q..¥eah,
Franco Harris "' surnffi'ed .'J'erry throw,Ima~,emylirea'fi. It was mJ&lt;: Digges! thrill."
up
tbe
Pittsburgh I 5aw the ball bounce off Tatum
Fuqua said he was dazed by
Steelers' 13 • 7 comeback and then l put my hands kind,of the collision. Asked if the ball
victory with five seconds low - !think around my knees . hit him first, Frenchy replied,
remaining in their American - and caught it.
"No comment."
Football Conference playoff
against Oakland Saturday.
It was a freak GO-yard touchdown pas" involving Steelers
Terry Bradshaw, Frenchy
Fuqua, Harris and Oakland
defender Jack T~tum that gave •
the Steelers a victory that
I
shocked even .the hometown
DETROIT (UPl) - Mickey Redmond scored
crowd of 50,350.
Bradshaw's pass was in- his sixth goal in five games Saturday and assisted
tended for wide receiver Barry on two others to lead the Detroit Red Wings to a 5-1
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER - NorthwoOd's Larry
Pearson but lt went to Fuqua, National Hockey League win over the Vancouver
Weber, a 6-5 junior forward from Seymour, Ind., was named
who
collided with Tatum and Canucks.
Most Valuable Player of the Second Annual Rio Grande
the ball squirted into the air at
~Uege Invitational Holiday Tournament following Friday
Goalie Roy Edwards of
the Oaklanct 35. lfarris copped Detroit didn't have a chance
night's championship game at Lyne Center. In two games,
the ball at the Oakland 42 and for a shutout. Vancouver's Defenseman Dale Tallon put
W~ber pumped In 51]!9intsforthe champion Blue Devils, and
sprinted down the left sideline Barry Wilkins put a screened the Cancuks in trouble right
w..s a controllln'g factor on both boards in wins over West
away when he drew a major
for the winning touchdown.
Virginia state and Concord. PresenUng trophy on right is Rio
shot past him from the point penally for highsticklng 59
"! just happened to be in the early in the second period for
Redman Boo:ater Wendell Thocnas.
seconds into the contest.
right place at the right time," his fifth goal of the season.
Delvecchio scored when the
Redmond flipped in his 19th game was 3:14 old and Redgoal of the season early in the mond scored 31 seconds after
opening period, converting the Tallon came out of the penalty
rebound of Ron Sl!lckhouse's box.
shot. Earlier in the period on a
Referee Andy Hellemond
power play, Atex Delvecchio called
two
tO-minute
had slid In his ninth of the
season after a shot by Redmond.
GALUPO!:JS - America 's players.
basket
must
be
taken
while
craziest and most t linun Fontaine slipped behind
Shaw Brothers bring their
predictable sport- Donkey l'ombination of circus at- sitting on the donkey. U fans the defense and converted a
' Basketball - will be featured mosphere and rodeo thrills \o are · looking for a fun-filled pass by Redmond with six
at Washington Gym , at town for the benefit of Blue evening for the entire family, minutes left In the second
they should come out and period to make It j.J. Red
Gallipolis, 7: 30 p.m., on Devils Booster Club..
"atc.h the local "cowboys" ·
Friday, Dec. 29. The teams will
The old saying, "stubborn challenge Pistol Pete, Sugar, Berenson scored his fifth of the
be made up of local basketball as a mule,"will be exemplified
season for Detroit ·and Marcel
Tornado, Zeb, Suicide, and ihe Dionne got his 15th while the
w,hen the local boys match wits rest of the donkeys that will be •
l).ed Wings had a two-man
with the donkeys. The odds are In the big game.
NBA Standings
advantage late in the game,
By United Press International that in most cases the donkeys
will win. The old rodeo days
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
will be brought to mind when
w. I. pc1. g.b,
the local Gene Autrys and Roy
Boston
27 4 .871
l\lew York
27 9 .ISO 2'h Rogers t&lt;.ke their spills and
Buffalo
9 24 .273 19
Philadelphia 3 32 .086 26 ·bounces.
There will be plenty of laughs
Central Division
family PICk
Touch.'·
w. I. pc1. g.b. lor the entire family during
Ballimore
18 u .563
Includes these
this !unfilled evening. ll is
Atfanla
19 IS .559
4 $111dwlthe$
really a lltUe different from
Houston
I~ 18 .AJ8 4
llld 4 Ordel'l
Cleveland
9 26 .257 10V&gt; regular basketball. Taking a
Wuttrn Conference
of fr111Ch lries.
shot at the buk~t. when the
MillwHt Division
w. I. pet. g.b. donkey decides to go the other
Milwaukee
24 9 .727
Chi~go
21 11 . ~56 2•.; way, or decides you have been
t(C.Qmaha
20 18 .526 6'12 on his back too long, can be
O.frolt
15 17 .469 8V&gt; very dilficult. Every shot at the .
Pocllic Division
Vf. t: pet. g.b.
loiAngeles . 27 6 .818 Golden State 20 11 .645 6 Col East 82 Toledo Scott 75
Plloenlx
17 18 .46 ll'h Col. Watterson 67 Big Walnut
PICIIfsuoNAL IIAI,I. FITTING,
SMilie
10 28 .263 19V&gt; 62
DIIUINI, I ' INSTlUCTION AVAILAIU
PorltllrMi
• 27 .229 20
PHONE
Clrclevl ~ le 73 Teays Valley 66
Pridly'a ~"'
• SHCIM. IATD TO:
Col.
St.
Charles
62
Gurnsey
Aflanr. 110 Buffalo 109
CIIUICII GIOUPS, P.l.lTlES.
Catholic 44
446-3362
S1VDINTS.,
8oston Ill KC-Omw 90
New Albany 65 Col. Academy
53
lltw
~~~levellnd
Detrolll
tilt t7 17
Springfield
Catholic 51 Piqua
"All Ne"' AMF Equipment"
+louttlllt I I lit 1.03
47
t!lii~JOtntM l I fbt ~ 110
Boniamln Logan 72 Grenon 63
Upper Rt. 7 Kanauga, Ohio
c;~to 127 Porllllid 97
Loveland
86
Deer
Park
-IS
Oni1 g1mes ICiitdultd I
Sycamore 74 Mlilord SO

SOUTHERN'S Ron HID (44) leaps high into air In an
effort to block Shot of Eastern's·John Shee~ (35). Eastern
won the SVAC game, 57-36. (Leo Hlll photoa).

•..

ALL GAMES
Team
W L P OP
Gallipolis
6 o 399 m
.Waverly
l 0 410 283
Portsmouth
6 1 -183 43'1
Athens
4 2 342 302
Soulh Point
l 3 S76 444
Logan
4 J 472 424
'
Chesapeake
3 J :142 347
Fed-Hocking
3 3 319 349
VINTON - Jamie Lafon, :;.
Ironton
2 4 372 348
Meigs
2 4 352 383 11 senior guard, continued to be
Jackson
1 6 363 SOl the leadi11g scorer In the
Wellston
o 6 305 520 Southern Valley Athletic
· Friday's Results:
Portsmouth 83 Washington CH Conference here Friday night
64
in leading the Synunes Valley
Federal-Hocking S8 Ross SE 47 Vikings to an 81-67 victory over
New Lexington 64 Logan 63
Portsmouth East 69 Jackson 54 the North Gallia P~ates .
.Aiexa.nder 1:14 Wellston ss
Lafon had been averaging 17
!Saturday night's Athens.
Lanci!!ster,
Ironton-Ports. points In his two other league
mooth, Federal -Hocking . g&lt;.mes. He . scored 20 points
Miller games not Included In Friday night on seven field
all.games standings) .
goals and ~ix free throws.
Thursday's Games:
Athens af Parkersburg
Teammate Rich Corn took high
Waverly at Portsmouth
scoring
honors with 24 points.
Friday's Game:
South Point at Meigs
Three other Vikings · hil the
SEOAL VARSITY
Team
W L ,p OP
Waverly
4 0 331 220
Gallipolis
4 o 264 200
Logan
3 1 273 241
Athens
3 1 237 197
Ironton
1 3 240 233
Meigs
1 J 229 276
Jackson
0 4 224 312
wellston
0 4 201 320
TOTALS
16 16 1999 1999
SEOAL RESERVES
NEW LEXINGTON - Jim
Team
W L P OP Middaugh's 20-foot jumper
Logan
4 0 202 140
Gallipolis
3 1 152 109 from the top of ihe foul circle
Waverly
3 1 176 W
with four seconds remaining
Athens
3 1 168 135
Ironton
2 2 153 156 gave host New uxlngton a
Meigs
1 3 w 165 thrilling 64-63 upset victory
Jackson
o 4 139 185
. Wellston
0 4 89 189 over the Logan Chieftains in a
basketball game
TOTALS
16 16 1220 1220 non-teague
.
SEOAL FROSH
here Friday night.
Team
W L P OP
The deleatlefl Logau with
Jackson
4 1 243 208
•• season markTh
Gallipolis
4 1 223 154
a .....
.
e
Logan
J 1 151 121
Panthers upped their record
Waverly
2 2 189 141
to 4-3.
Ironton
2 2 121 156
"
Ne~'
·•} g•-•
I ""d'bff ,._
Athiini'
·· · 1 3 ucr 135
"""An
wn urn""
w
Meigs
1 3 123 ISO an 13-12 first period lead, and
Wellston
0 4 101 232
36-28 during the
Totals
11 17 1297 1297 was .on lop
.
.
Wednesday's Results:
halftime
mtermlss10n.
Jackson 47 Gallipolis 41
Midway in the third periOd,
Ironton 46 Wellston 35
New J.,exlngton increased its
lead to 14 points, 44-30,
The Chiefs finally found the
range and came storming back
HELP ENLISTED
to take a 61-60 lead with I:10
DES MOINJ':S, Iowa (UPI)
-Bill StanfiU, deputy commis- left in the game on two straight
sioner for the Amateur Athletic jumpers by Jim Pierce.
Log"an regained possession,
Union foc Iowa and a member
and
began stalling. Randy
of the AAU National Board,
said Friday that his group has Norris ssnk two free throws
enlisted the help of President with 28 seconds left to give the
Nlxon and Vice President Chiefs a 63-60 lead.
Fred Ansel worked unAgnew in trying to restore the
Olympic medals and Olympic . derneath for a bucket with 10
records of the late Jim Thorpe. seconds left to cut the Chiefs
lead to one, 63-62.

I

!.

'

r
•

f•
[•..

l

TM Trademark of HomeUte,
a dhtlslon ofTextron Inc.

RIDENOUR

Redmond paces

Donkey basketball game
scheduled December 29

'

Parts and Service
John Ridenour
Chester, Ohio
RUNNERUP AWARD for
the Second Annual Rio
Holiday Invitational
.Basketball Tournament is
accepted here by Concord's
Jerome Smyre from Rio
Redman Booster Wendell
Thomas. Smyre tallied 44
. points in two tournament
games.

misconduct penalties later in
the game. One of them was on
Henry Boucha, whom Talton
inflicted a six-stitch cut above
the left ear in the first period,
and the other on Tallon for
protesting Dionne 's goal.

ot
~

by REDMAN IIDUSTRIES

5-A-V-E,"on EITHER
OF THESE 2 MODELS

1

~
~~.
"
. NICK lble (34) altemJ&gt;ts Short jumper against Eastern in
' fN AC game played at 1'\acine Friday. Lookmg on is
Eastern's Randy Boring (33).

(1) ELECTRIC (1) GAS ~r FUEL

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Rio JV's are

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Delivery 1:! Sn-up f'ree

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HRS: Mon. thru Friday 9-8

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*

II

SUPPLY

Red Wings win

Sat. 9-5
Oosed on Sunday '

* Ta•ru 6 Tert J Trill••• *

(ALL DAY)

~ 2-1
•

on year

•

, RIO GRANDE - The Rio
'Grande JV basketball team
~on two of Its first three games
))rior to the holiday vacation to
begin the 1972-73 season. All of
IJ1e games were played at Rio
prande's Lyne Center.
: In their first game, the
jtedmen were ,edged in the
~omecomlng
game
by
Wilberforce, 81-79.
'• Rio Grande later evened •Is
record at 1-1 with an exciting
as-83 win over the Ohio
University • Chilllcothe br~nch
as Rio's Jolm Skagg.s scored
the winning basket with just
seconds left In the game.
The Redmen then captured
\lleir second win of the season,
87-63, over Walsh. Walsh led 3633 at the half before Rio erased
the "Cavallers'load enroute to a

.

vlctary.

Rio

GALUPOl,S,

' !
double figure mark . Dave
.Junfee, 5·9 senior, who
had been averaging , 13.5
points per game added
19 points; Phil Robinson,
the league's second best
scorer, canned· II points.
Robinson Is nursing -a bad ·
ankle which limits his mobility .
Dave Robinette, 6-2 junior
forward, continues to be North
Gallia's best scoring threat. He
canned 19 points In pacing the
Pirates. T. J. Robinson, li-9
senior guard, had 15 points.
Two 2S point quarters proved

to be the clincher for Coach
Wayne White Vikings.
The Lawrence Countlans led
18-16 going into the second
period but outscored the
Pira~es. 25-10, in laking a 43-26
lead at the half.
The first period was a seesaw affair with both sides
hitting over the zone. T. J.
Robinson led the "rtrate attack
while Rich Corn, 5-ltt ·senior
and Lafon paced the Vikings.
Lafon, Corn, Dunfee and
Robinson were especially hot .
during the second and third

New Lexington edges
Logan Chiefs, 64-63

•l•

Grande had eleven
players ICill"~ against Walsh.
Jay Pendleton ended the game
with 21. TCIID Smith flnlsbed
with It lllld Leslie Ware had 10.
WQII wu paced by Gene
FrltiUrt'a 2a points, Jim

r.

Lipnickey scored 13, and Joe
KorOde had 10.
The Rio JV team Is Idle until
January 12th and 13th. The
Redmeo wilt travel to Canton,
OhiotomeetWalshand Malone
colleges.
REDMEN NOTES : The
·eight new members of the
Redmen
Booster
Club
Executive Committee are : Dr.
James Dailey, Bob Sawldcrs,
Harold
Wiseman,
Ike
Wiseman, Merril Grodin,
Wendell Thomas, Lowell
(Buzz ) Call and Carrell
Waugh.
Rio varsity captain Ron
Lambert of A-lexandria,
Virginia
and
varsity
~ heerleader Sheila
Prill
celebrated birthdays Dec. 19.
The Rio Grande varsity
travels to Findlay, Ohio Dec. 27
and 28 lor the Findlay
BOOsters' Club Tournament.
Rio Grande playa Erskine and
Findlay meets Babaon College
in first round games.

New uxlnctoa wenllnlo a
full court press. l..ogan't Jim
Kemper tried 1o can time out
uoder "the Panthers' boop,
but the officials apparently
did 1101 see Kemper' a effort.
Thus, New Lex was awarded
the ball under ill own bucket
with eight secondslefl. Thea
came Middaugh's game·
w[nnlng shot from an Inbounds play,
Logan was ln foul trouble
lc
• h '!' ·"'
.
Threa
wroug
ou we game.
LHS regulars, Campbell,
Norris and Culbertson aU had
•
three personals early in the
first half. The Chiefs, on the
other hand, had only one oneand-one foul shooting situation
during the entire game. Logan
was whistled for 21 personals,
New Lex eight.
Logan hlt 30 of 74 field goal
attempts for 40.5 pet. New Lex
hit 27 of 64 from the field for
42.2 pet. Logan outrebounded
the host Panthers, 44-21.
Sophomore Chuck Kemper led
Logan with 12 rebounds. Mitch
Wright, also a sophomore,
hauled in nine.
New ux was 10 of 23 at the
foul circles, Logan was. 3 of 4.

Alexander stuns Wellston;
Jackson drops s~th tilt
WELLSTON - Visiting
Alexander shot a sensational 7G
pet., from the field, &amp;I of 68,
and stunped the Wellston
Golden Rockets 136-55 In a nonleague basketball game here
Friday night.
The victory left the Class AA
Spartans with a :HI season
mark. The Rockets are now ()-6
on the year.
Alexander led 32-~, 68-20 and
103-33 at the wuarter marks.
Two substitute players
wound up as the game's top
I
scorers for the powerful
.Spartans. Steve Thomas had 25
and Ted Gilkey 23 points .
Richard White added 17, Hank
Tribe 16 and Steve Brown 14.
For the Rockets, Dave
Souders tossed In ai and
Charles ' Snare added 16.
Wellston was 2i of ~ from the
field. WHS was 13 of 28 from
the foul circles, Alexander 32 of
42.
AHS won the reserve game,
51-41.
By Quarters:
Wellston .
9 11 13 22- 55
Alexander
32 36 35 33-136

visitors stormed to a 35-20
halftime advantage . Portsmouth East led 51-41 after
three periods.
For East, Tim Coey and
Mark Meason each tallied 14
points. Mike Clausing and John
Toppins each had 12.
One unusual note of Interest.
!'\andy Warrington, who played
four SEOAL games with
winless Wellston, has transferred to Jackson. Warrington
tallied six points in a losing
cause for the lronmen.

Five Chiefs linllbed In
double llgurea, led by
Plerte'al5 points. Middaugh
led the winDers with 31.
Logan wiD be -Idle unlll the
Chiefs' Jan. 5 trip to Gallipolls.
Box score:
LOGAN (63)- Pierce 7-1-15; .
Kemper 6·0·12; Norris 5-2·12;
Wright 5-0·10; Culbertson 5·0·
10; Campbel\2-0-4. TOTALS 30.
3-63.
NEW LEXINGTON (64)
Epllano 6·2·14; MlddauRh 14-l·
31 1 An,.l 2-3·71 Poling 1-2-4;
Wycklnskl3·0-6
; Gregory
TOTALS 27-10,·64.
. . •1.0·2.
Br Qvortors:
12 16 16 l9-6J
NL911an
ew Lex
18 18 12 26-.14
ReserYes - New Lex 35,
Logan 30.

l

.

,
By

TEUY '
quarters. ,Symmes Valley .
worked Its fast break to near
perfection. When the Pirates
stopped it, SV hit over the zone.
Symmes Valley sank 34 of 75
field goal attempts (or 45 pet.
and 13 of 20 free throws. Coach
Jim Foster's Pirates hit 29 of 67
floor shots for 43 pet. and nine
of 21 from the charity line.
North Gallla held · a 42-38
rebounding advantage with
Keith Weddington, 8-2 junior,
grabbing 18 rebounda.
North Gallia took the reserve
game, 37-27.
Greg James, a freshman, led
the winners with 1~ points, ·
Terry Pine had nine for
Symmes Valley,
The victory pushed Symmes
Valley's league record to 2-1
and dropped North Qallla Into
a tie with Southern. Both teams
have 2-3 league slates.' ·
North Gallla will battle
Hannan Trace at 7 p.m. Friday
In the opening game of the
Gallla County Holiday Tourntmentat Rio Grande College,
SYMMES VALLEY (121 DuniN 1·3·19; Corn 12-0·24 ;
Iafon 7-6-20 ; Webb 1-1·3;
Robln'O!\ 5·1-111 S.nnett 1-1·31
Quesenberry ).J.J. Toto Is 34·13·
81 .
NORTH GALLtA (671 Weddington 1-2-4; Robinette 7·
~· 19; Mlllor H -61 Robln1100 7-1 ·
151 Payne 2-0.4; lOCNift 3-0·61
James 3-0:.6:' Stout 2· f-!1 Smith
1-0-2. Totals 2f-f.f7,
8y Quortors:
Sym. Valley
18 25 25 13-81
North Galllo 16 10 20 21~7

'
In many palaces,
during
the medieval egos, the
collings were the most
note-wort~y thing In the
room . ~Y were either
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showing exposed ·con·
slructlon which preHnltd
a ceria in decorative etfect,

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Investing In e mobile

THE

Steve Sturgill, POrtsmouth's
outstanding player , missed
Friday's game as a result of
illness.
East hit 33 of 61 from the field
for 51 pet., and was 3 of 5 from
the foul circles. Jackson was 21
of 6llrom the fioor, good for 34
pel The Ironmen were 12 of 22
at the foul circles.
East won the reserve game,
45-36.
By Quarters :
Jackson
&amp; 14 21 1~
East
8 'll 16 18--69

ii""== ..,..ow.ao.ooo ....-..."

OR =

JACKSON - Visiting Portsmouth East handed Coach AI
Berger's fighting Jackson
lronmen their sixth loss In
seven starts here Friday night,
89-64.
After holding Eut to a
narrOII' 8-f lead following dne
period of play, the down-river

Neither team plays until Jan .
5 when the Eagles .will try to.
put a stronger hold on first
plaee with a meeting against
tough Hannan Trace at Mercerville. Southern will he hOme
against the Symmes Valley
Vikings.
EASTERN (57) - Dill 3-1·7,
Boring 7-0-14, Duvall 7,0.J4,
Spencer 3·1·7, Cross 1-0·2,
Sheets 3-1-7, Atherton 1-0-2,
McCoy 2 ·0· ~. Totals 27·3-57.
SOUTHER.N (;,6) - lhlel·O·
2, Curfman S-2·12, Ord 1-0-2;
Hill 1·4-6, Theiss 1-0-2, Sayre 4&lt;
4-12. Totals 13-10·36.
.
Eastern
15 8 12 22-57
Southern
9 7 4 16-J.\

Symmes Valley captures
81-67 victory over NG

•

.I

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�•.

11- !'he Sunday Times- Sentinel, SIUlday, Dec. 24, j972

edges .Concord

~-:

~College results

•Y.

'

'

College BK B Results
By United Press lnteni~tion~l
East
Marshall 74 Morhed St. 71
John Jay 2 Hunler O, forfeit
Brown 77 New Hamp. 71
St.Jos.Pa. 90 San Jse St. 76
C.W.Posl74 Wagner 57
Dei.Sf. 101 Slsbry Sl. 81
LaSalle
92 W. Chesler 52
RIO GRANDE - Coach Steven Schoenherr's
well-disciplined Northwood of Indiana Blue Devils, Maryland 88 South
Geo. Wash. 79
So.
Car.
88
Indiana
85
doWn 12 points, 22-10, with 10:19 remaining in the
Va . Union 86 Cent, St. 67
first half, .came storming back to hand Coach Ira Howard lOS Morehse 83
70 Kent St: 63
Blankenship's Concord, W, Va., Mountain Lions Clemson
Tulane 69 Ga. Tech 68
their first basketball setback of the 1972-73 cam- LSU 67 Florida 54
,
paign h,ere Friday night, 84-77.
· Va , lech 71 Richmond 61
· Midwest ·
Thus the Blue Devils captured the Second Villanova 54 Detroit 41
Annual Rio Grande College Holiday Invitational Wayne Sf. 97 BIIQ. St. 84
La, 76
Basketball Tournament. Northwood defeated West Bradl~y 108 NE
West
Virginia Siate 81-71 in a first round game Thursday Ida. Sf. 89 uc,s .B. 79
Southern Cal 75 Ill. 72
night.
UCLA 89 PI Its burgh 73
Oregon
68 Gonzaga 56
West Virginia Slate captured 2-5. The Jackets are J.ii.
No. Car. 64 California 61
third place tournament honors
Coach Curtis Price's Yellow Stanford 77 Fordham 54
·tntl City Classic
by downing host Rio Grande 93- Jackets grabbed an early lead,
AI
Long Beach, Calif.
. 82 in Friday's consolation and was up by seven, 36-28,
(lsi round)
battle. .
.
. with six minutes left' in the first LoyoJa.&lt;;al. 92 UC lrvne 58
·Long Beach 104 LIU 62
Coach Art Lanhain's Rf!l- half.
• U, Conn. Classic
men had dropped Thursday's
With Ron Lambert leadmg
AI Storrs, Conn.
opening tilt to Concord, 94-84,
(lst round) 1 a
the Rio attack, the Redmen
Syracuse 78 Yale 72
In Friday's championship
pulled within one, 35-34, with
Harvard 80 Conn. 70
contest,. Jerome Smyre, 6-3
Dayton Classic
3:34 left in tbe half. West
senior fonrard hit four
AI
Dayton, Ohio
Virginia State led CS-40
(lsi roundl
slralebt jump sboiB from
during the halftime lnAlabama 74 Fla. St. 68
afar aa lbe previously liD•
Daylon 73 Nrlhwslrn 66
termiuion.
beaten Uons zommed to a 9-Z
Roadrunner Invitational
The YeUow Jackets moved to
At Las Cruces, N.M.
lead during lbe first four
a 57-47 advantage with 15!16
(lsi round I
minutes of play.
SIU.Crbndle
75 Xavler-0: 65
left in the game. ' Rio came
'!'he West VirginiaOS' were on storming·back during the next New Mex. St. 86 VMI 57
'
top 18-6 with 12':24 lefl in the seven minutes · to reduce the
LAMBEET SCORES- Rio Grande's 6.4 junior captain, Rort Lal)lbert, forward, pops in a
half, and led 2i-10 at the 10:19 Jackets lead to two, 69.67, with
OHIO COLLECE
twiniJOinter in this action Shot of Friday's consolatjon g~me of the Second Annual Rio Grande
BASKETBALL SCORES
mark when the tide began to 8:02 left in the game:·
Holiday Invitational Basketball Tournament. Lambert finlshe&lt;l the game with 26 points. That's
.iniled Press International
turn.
Rio's Mike Rouse behind Yellow Jackets' Rance Berry, 43, and Rodney Gilmer, 51. On left is
Th·e Redmen, however, Ashland 116 Millon (Wis.J 80
With the toilrnB!IIent's most began fouling, and the Jackets Wright State 52 Cleveland Slate
West Virginia state'sRon Calloway, 31. Rio lost, 93-82. (Steve Wilson photos).
valuable player, Larry Weher, took advantage of the situation 48
, (Capital City Classi&lt;l
6-5 jlUlior forward, pacing .the . at the foul circle, pulling away Capital 79 Valparaiso (Ind.) 77
Blue Devils' attack, Northwood to an 83-73 lead with 4:07 left. Wayne Stale (Mich.)97 Buflalo
Stale (N, Y,) 84 (cons.)
kf!Pt banging away at the
Rio Holiday Tournament
Alfred Vance, 6-() sophomore
Concord's advantage. Finally,
Northwood
82 Concord
guard, led the winners with 31 (W, Va.l 77 (Ind.)
'
!Champ.)
the Blue Devils to:ok their first
points. Dwight Street, 6-6 Wesl Virginia Stale 93 Rio
lead of the game, 28-25, on a tip· senior forward popped in 17 for Grande 82 (cons,)
in by Weber with 4:11
Univers~tY of Dayton ,
the winners, Bill Matthews
Invitational
remaining in the half.
added II.
Alabama 74 Florida State 68
During the riext three
For the Redmen, :lton Dayton 73 Northwestern 66
minutes, the lead exchanged Lambert, captain, dropped In
hands five times. Kev Snow's
long jumper put Northwood 26 points. Doug Hart added 1i,
and Steve Bartram 13.
ffi
ahead30-29 with 1:43left in the
The Jackets controlled both
half. The Blue Devils were
boards, hau.ling down 52
never headed.
reboWlds compared to 32 by
Northwood led 38-35 during Rio.
Street picked off 11
the halftime intermission.
rebolUlds to pace the winners.
After C. W. Cia)'\or'ssbtrt Lambert snagged II for Rio. •
jumper cut lbe Devlll' ~d . 'Rio hij aa of !llllt~tlle,ifield
ro~
1
to one openla&amp; secelld ~ tor 3U pet. The Rednlen were
United ' Press International
play, NorCinraod mabatalaed
UCLA's top-ranked Bruins
18 of ?:l at the foul circles,
a fouf IG 10 poillt lead lbe
welcomed
back Coach Joha
West VIrginia Slate shot a
r~a!Dder of the evening.
sizzling SU pet. from the Wooden Friday night in the
With 4:21 left in the game,
field, hitting 39 of 72 shots. only way they knew he would
Concord trailed 76-66. The
The Jackets were 15 of 25 appreciate - by winning.
Lions made a last ditch effort
The · victory, which came
from lbe foul circles.
to Pull it out of the fire,
Rio had 19 turnovers, the against twir toughest foes of
reducing tbe Oevill' lead to winners had 22 miscues.
the year, gave the Bruins an
foul' points, 711-72, with 3:06left,
even
50 straight triumphs Following the finals, the allbut the Indiana quintet held on, tournament team was named ten short of the all-time major
'
sinkiJ11 sis foul abota during and most valuable player college win streak set by the
.
the final minute of play.
&lt;X&gt;N&lt;X&gt;RD'S
Bill Smith (44) drives Inside Northwood's defense for a layup during Friday's
award was presented, along Bill Russell-led University of
Weber Jed all scorers with 33 with the first and second place San Francisco.
championship game at Rio's Lyne Center. Others left to right are Mark Sandy, Concord; &amp;&gt;b
poinls. Mike Oden, 6-4 Blue team trophies.
Lane, Northwood, Milt Arrington, Concord and Mike Oden, Northwood.
Wooden, who missed the first
Devil 1tenlor from Columbus,
Rio Grande's next outing is game of his 25-year UCLA
added 13 for the winners. Paul in the Findlay Boosters coaching career last Saturday
Weeks letaied 10,
•
OHIO HIGH. SCHOOL
Tournament; Dec. 27 and 28 at when he was hospitalized for a
BASKETBALL
SCORES
For the Lions, Smyre
week because of a mild ·heart
Findlay. •
By United Press International
finished with 20 markers. Mark
Dover 79 Coshocton 46
Box scores of Friday's condition, watched his team
Claymont
91 Meadowbrook 69
Smith added 18 and Bill Smith games;
overcome a good performance
.
Pfsmlh
West
78 Ptsmth Notre
17.
by
the
University
of
Pittsburgh
Dame
69
(Consolotion Gamel
The victory pushed NorthPtsmth East 6? Jackson 54
WEST
VIRGINIA STATE and a 37-point scoring effort by '
Pfsmth 83 washington C.H..64
wood's aeason mark to 8-2, (93)- Berry
3-2·8; Gilmer 0·2· Panther forward Bill Knight to
Ridgewood 91 Kidron , C. C. 68
ConcQI'd dropped to 5-I on the 2; Howard 3·0·6; Ingram o.o.o; win, 89-73.
Canton
C.C. 47 Garaway 44
Mafl~ews5- 1 · 11 ;Peterson 0-0.0;
year.
West
Holmes
76 Cloverleaf 71
Knight hit on 17 of 32 shots
Street 8-1-17; Vaden 2-6·10;
Riverdale 70 Ada 57
Coach Art Lanham's Red- Vance 14·3·31; Calloway 4.0.8; from the floor but even that
Bellefontaine 60 Lima C.C. 58
men lrafled all the way in the Lewis 0·0·0. TOTALS 39-IS-93. was not enough to compensate
Lima
Shawnee 64 Sidney 43
R 10 GRANDE 1121 Wapakoneta
70 Defiance 61
consolation em test. Rio Is now Bartram
5,J. t3; Hart 8·1-17; for the overall team play
Paulding
70 Van Wert 53
Thompson 1-2-4; Fausnaugh 0· exhibited by the Bruins. AllSpringfield C,C. 51 Piqua 47
NUXHAU. SIGNS
o.o; liose 2·0·41 Stewart 1·0·2;
Miam i Easl 73 Fairlawn 64
CINCINNATI - The ol' Rouse 2·1-51 Bollinger 3-3-9; American cenler Bill Walton
Mendon Unlon71 Marion Local
Larnbert 10·6-26; Wade 0·2·2. and Keith Wilkes combined lor
67
'
lefthander, Joe Nuxhall, will be TOTALS 32-18-82.
Anna
85
Jackson
Cenler
SO
38
points
for
UCLA.
"rounding third and heading
Kenton
so
Elg
in
53
IChlmpionship Gamel
for home" again during the
WHEELERSBURG- Coach Pirates, hauling down 30 Parkway 74 Coldwater 671
CONCORD (77) - Arrln~lon
Pro
St8ndings
Sl. John 60 Ayersville
1973 season, ' Nuxhall has 2·1-5; Claytor •·1 -9; DAr·
Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue rebolUlds, had seven assists, Delphos
52
signed a cont:cact ~continue as cangelo 1·0·2; King 2-0·41
' NHL Standings
Devils scrimmaged a tall an.d five steals and 17 turnovers. Lorain Admiral King 69 Fin, 8-2-18; Smith 7-3·)7 ;
By United Press International
part of the Cincmnati Reds 'sandy
The Pirates had 17 personals,
dlay 58
talented Wheelersburg quintet
Smyre H -20; Spangler 0·2·2.
East
East 68 St. Marys 54
radio broadcasting team. This TOTALS 31·15·77.
w. I. 1. pis gf ga here·Friday morning and came hit 25 of 67 field goal attempts Allen
Ft. Loramie 84 Russia 52
NORTHWOOD
1141
Snow
Montreal
20 s 8 48 132 77 out on top, 73-61. ·
will be Joe's seventh year on
for 37 pet., and sank II of 26 Cleve. St. Joseph 75 Manslld.
2-H; Broughton 3,1).6; Meyer .Soslon
22
8
3
47
153
'
1
06
throws for 42 pet. The
Sl. Peters 47
the air and he'll again be 0,4-4 ; Weber 15·3-33; Oden 6·1· NY Rangers 21 11 J 45 134 96
The Pirates, 4-2 on the year, free
, 1 , ked off 26 b d . Mansfld Senior 77 Lorain
P
working with AI Michaels on 13; Lane 2-0·4; Weeks 4-2·10 ; Buffalo
18 9 7 43 129 99 fielded a starting five which
1ra es PIC
re oun s
Senior 59
14 15 3 31 100 112 averaged over 6.'1, Wheelers- and had 15 turnovers,
the play-by-play broadcasts. Basler 4-0-8, TOTALS 36-12-84, Detroit
New Philadelphia 66 Mansfield
Toronto
9 18 5 23 98 109
·
Malabar 59 (oil
Vancouver · 9 20 5 23 100 142 burg was said to be one of the Player
Ill·•
fl.a
PI rb to Ontario 75 Clear Fork 70
Price
10 J.7 J 9 4 Willard 95 Bucyrus 18
lllllil'.,.,,..,.....,...,..,lh!MMMa.a.ltlltltllt"''lllll,.... NY Islanders 3 25 4 10 64 156 strongest physical, squads the Noe
105' 22
8·IO 5 13 5 Upper Sandusky 91 Shelby 59
West
· 3·5
Orr
·
1-3
I 2 I Plymoulh ll Lexington 54
Gallian~
have
met
all
year,
w. I. I. pb gl ga
S8 3
Kiesling
1
Chicago
20 10 2 42 122 83 including scrimmages and Sheets
·6 ·• 1 12 0 Gallon 55 Norwalk Senior 53
2
2 Hillsdale 68 Smithville 51
Minnesota
i8 12 ~ 39 117 94 regular season play.
. o.o
Berridge
4-60·0020
Phlla
16 15 4 36 125 124
1·2 0-0
, Crestview 54 Cresll ine 48 .
Niday
Pillsburgh
15 14 3 33 121 106 The rugged Pirates held a 14- Singer
o.o o.o 01 01 21 Brooklyn 73 North Roya lion 60
Atlanta
15 16 5 35 94 107 12 advantage following one
0. 1 0_0 3 0 2 Aurora 41 Chardon 38
Los Angeles
14 16 4 32 107 107 session. Gallipolis was on top Johnson
TOTALS 28·56 17·26 15 30 17 Twinsl!urg 53 Chagrin Falls 33
St. Louis
10 IS 6 26 82 102
25-67 tl-26 17 26 15 Cleve. East Tech 94 Cleve.
Opponents
California
5 20 7 11 85 137 38-26 after two periods. The
Collinwood 76
GAHS
12 26 18 17 - 73 Cleve.
Frld1y's Results
JFK 65 Cleve, John
Gallians held a 56-44 advantage WHS
14 12 18 17~1
Adams 57
Calilornla 4 Buffalo 2
after the third session.
IOnly game scheuled)
Coach Osborne used nine
AHL Standings
By United Press International men in lhe practice tilt.
East
w. I. I. pts gl ga As a unit, !he Galiians
This Offer Good thru Jan, 1, 1973
Nova Scotia 16 9 840129 90 committed IS personals, hit 28
Rochester
16 9 6 38 111 109 of 56 field goal attempts for 50
Boston
17 14 4 38 110 121
Providence 14 11 5 33 115 101 pet. (against a Wheelersburg
With Each Oil Change
Springfield
8 16 5 21 106 126 zone) and sank 17 of 26 free
the inspiration
New Haven
7 21 6 20 107 16i throw attempts for 66 pet.
Wost
of faith a11&lt;l love fill
w. 1: I. pis gl ga The Galllans controUed the
No ~eturn
32 oz.
your heart with quiet peace
Clnclnnall
24 8 2 so 148 97 boards against the rangy
Btls.
Btls:
Hershey
15 9 7 37 117 95
and happine~J. A joyous Noel to all.
Virginia
}4 11 6 34 113 108
DOUBLE TOP VALUE STAMPS
Cleveland
10 14 7 27 119 liS
Rlc~mond
12 18 3 27 116 126 h1dlan Hill 66 Made ria 64
With Fill-up of 10 Gal. or more.
Balltmore. , S 18 7 17 77 128 Finneytown 65 Ml, Heallhy 60
Fnday s lltsulls
Glen Esle 71 Mariemont 66
Phone 446-9108
Hershey 7 Baltimore 3
Hamillon Taft 83 Cln Sl
Boston 4 Sprlnj)fleld 2
Xavier 70
·
·
New
HavenS
Richmond
3
Cln
.
Elder
67
Cln.
Woodward
39
St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Rochester 3 Providence 2
Princeton 103 Hamilton
Gallipolis,
IOnly gam~s scheduled)
Garfield 71

by _84-77 tally

.'

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
County ElJlenaion Agent,
the NEW in FARMING
· Agriculture
POMEROY - One of the available for some structures color also affect comfort
, most common req~esls of the · Or the customer may find
Included jn the Family
Cooperative Exlension Service sufficient information in one of Housing Handbook are such
is ;
U1e · books so that he can things as assessing your family
"Do you hav~ a plan for a , Pr&lt;&gt;eeect.
needs, traffic patterns,
building?" The answer is yes.
Books currenUy !vailable in devel&lt;iping a remodeling plan,
Through the Midwest Plan the f2 range are The Family storage, as. well as many
Service building plans, plan Housing Handbook, Dairy suggestions on kitchen, living
'bool\s, structures, and details. Housing and Equipment Hand- :iress, bedrooms, bathrooms
of all phases of construction book, Swine Housing and and baSements.
'
are readily available.
Equipment Handbook, and
THE HORSE ·HANDBOOK
This service is provide!~ in Horse Handbook. The Beef gives many options on styles of
Ohio through The Ohio Stale Ca!Ue Handbook is $1. For , construction, essentials for
University Agricultural those wanting a detailed planning, site selection
·Enslneering Department. handbook on structures and · layouts for stalls, as well a~
Headquarlers for the service is enviromnent a complete book many {eatures and pieees of
at Iowa State University, is available for $5.
equipment. Soine of the inAmes, ldwa. Thirteen stales
An inleresting comment in teresting itetns listed include
cooperate in providing this the Family Housing Handbook, automatic gates, latches
service.
while directed to us, also ap- hinges, windbreak fences'
In Meigs County our ex- plies to livestock. The author Dutch doors, show box and
lension office atlempts to keep points out that "creating llving malerials.
,
'
one or two copies of each'book spaces in which people can be · With increased interest in
on hand at all limes so those truly comfortable Is a con- ecology, the manure handling
inleresteq can come in, look at tin.uing challenge to designers, seCtion ~n the Dairy Housing
them, and if they decide to take builders, and families."
and Equipment Handbook is of
one, buy it on the spot. If they
Comfort conditioning of a paJilcular interest to farmers.
wish to . examine it more house means more than just Some,of the recommendations
carefully, then arrangements temperature and moisture on ·solid manure handling
·
are made to loan the book for a control. Your ability to follow: .
period of
maintain a comfortable house
- Haul manure directly to
For those trying to figure out will depend, in part, on sOIUld fields when possible. When a
. what they would like to do in construction - tight windows, stockpile Is necessary, Joeale it
regara , to building, a free adequate insulation, heating for convenient loading in a
broehure is provided listing all and cooling equipment, etc. spreader, out of natural
of the books, plans, digests, Other factors such as space, drainageways, and away from
homes, and !qulpment systems sound, dirt, privacy, llght, and any water source, Divert
available, In some caSes this
provides all the client wishes,
Detailed working drawings are

time. ·

. HE~ FOR LOCKER ROOM -Rio Grande Coach Art
Lanham and :Ri9 Redmen leave for the locker room tra!Ung
West Virginia State 4S..O during the halftime intermisalon of
Friday's consolation holiday tournament game.

'

Galliasales
'

_,. tax revenue up

in November

it 50 wins

..

GAHS Wlns
•
scrzmmage
tilt 73~61·

'1
TOUGH MAN ro STOP -Northwood of Indiana's Mike
Oden ( 42) a 6.4 senior forward from Columbus, fires a
jumper from the side for two of his 13 points in the Blue
Devils' 84-77 championship vi~ory over Concord at Lyne
Center Friday night. Lions on right are Mark Sandy (24) and
Jerome Smyre ( 20).

FREE LUBE JOB

roay

PEPSI or 7-UP
4
'1

J. D. "orth Produce Co.

SMITH &amp;HAll ErS. ASHlAND

Vine

l

o.

!
i

l
j

1.
j

J
'l'
I

•./

&lt;We're teomins up
with Santa and hir
reinrle•r to bring you
happy halldtly wirhtr.

i

..''
'

'•I

JACKSON

'

PRODUCTION
CREDIT, ASSOC. .
Dick Sterrett,
Manager

COLUMBUS - Ohio sales
tax collections iri Gallia CoWlty
for the reporting period from
Nov.ltoNov.30,1972showeda
POMPANO BEACH, Fla.$9,047.74 increase above George M. Irvine, Jr .,
collections for the same month president oflhe bOat division of
of last year, according to Chris-Craft Industries, Inc.,
figures released Saturday by the world's largest builder of
Gertrude Donally, State motor boats, was elected a
Treasurer.
director of the company by the
Collecting for the period, shareholders at their annual
Nov. I through Nov. 30 totaled meeting Dec. 19, ·
$56,044.90 as compared to
Irvine has been president of
$46,997.16 the same month in the Chris-Craft Boat Division
1971.
,
since June 12, in charge of the
The state treasurer also company's worldwide boat
reported a slight increase in operations, including 10 boat
the year-to-date sales \ax and engine manufactqring and
cpliectioris in Galiia County . distribution facilities in the
'· "~~J eoliee,tions of t;144,122.~ . United Slates, Italy, Swit·
period of July 1, 1972 to zeriand and Taiwan.
·
Nov. 30, 1972 as c9mpared to
Irvine recently returned
$337,816.47 for the period from from making a survey of the
July I, 1971 to Nov. 30, 1971.
recreation boating industry in
Motor ~hide taxes collected Europe and visiting the In·
during November in Gallia ternational Boat Show at
ColUlty totaled $31,576.19, an Genoa, Italy, and Chris..,'raft
increase of $1,031.76 over last · facilities in Italy and Swityear.
zerland,
Chris-Craft Industries also
owns television stations In Los
Angeles and Portland, Oregon
and is a manufacturer of inWILL NOT LEAVE
dustrial and agricultural
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UPI) chemicals, plastics and fiber
- Coach Bear Bryant said and foam products, C-CI
Friday that he has no intention operates a plant in Gallipolis,
''under any circumstances" of Ohio manufacturing small
leaving the University of craft engine employing apAlabama to take the head proximately 100 persons.
coaching job of the New
Orleans Saints of the National
Football League,
Bryant said that he will pay
Saints' General Manager Dick
Gordon "strictly a soctal visit"
after the bowl season and "the
many meetings scheduled in
,January," but '1ootball will
not be involved in any form."

Mobile unit

.......

~-,._

12'x60' MARLETTE
'

•'

MANY

FACTURERS
STANDARD

FOR
~

'

•'

.,
~

!) '

1

HOURS, 9-8 Monday thru Friday
9-5 Sot. S,UNDAY CLOSED

·

g~~~
MOBILE
HOME
1M Jim Staats or Jot Gllet

Upp~r

Rt. 1 Next Door to

PhoM446-f340

surface water away from the
storage area.
- Check local regulations for
recommended runoff control
systems: II no regulation
exists, collect manure runoff
from stoekpites or lots in a
detention pond if runoff may
cause pollution.
- Many Meigs County
farmers have already constnicted labOr saving loading
ramps for handling manu~ .
Loading ramp~ facilitates
loading solids into a spreader
· with a scraper blade. Note that
, drainage is away from the
ramp: ·
OTHER SPECIAL ITEMS in
the Dairy Handbook are a
tilting-cow table, SIUI shades,
corrals, headgales, calf pens
and stalls, and feeding bunks
and feeding fences.
There are several problems
in the construction of buildings.
PJ:obaply two of the most
common are having the
building when it Is desired or
needed, but. more important
than this possibly is the
planning ahead of the actual
construction, Adequate and
thorough planning before
construction is started means
when the building is completed
it will be of the quality &amp; construction desired and will serve
the' owner fQ.r many years in
the future. Too many people do

not plan ahead.
An example was observed
years ago when .a family
needed help on a kitchen plan.
Because they had already
constructed ~ . doorway a
refrigerator had to be put in an
awkward place. If this had
been planned ahead of time a
6-in. change in the location of
lhe doorway would have
provided a well-Planned kitchen,'
Few of us . have the opportunity to start from scratch,
that is, lay o~t the entire farmstea !I and construct its
buildings, However if we would
consider the entire farmstead
every lime we make a change,
we rilight he much farther
ahead. ·.
Buildings are an essential
part of every farm operation.
Some two-thirds or more of
total working time on a
livestock farm is spent in and
around .the builamgs area,
Sooner or later each building is
remodeled or replaced.
If several buildings will be
built new or remodeled, either
at one time or over a period of
years, take a close look at your
present farms lead site. This is
especially important before
erecting a new home. The
home is one of the more expeosive and permanent
buildings on a farmslead.

· ·

A carefully studied farm- and other wind protection is determined and taken Into
stead plan on paper is im- developed. Poor drainage can account .before exte'OSive
portant to avoid problems. he corrected in usually a day or building projects are · un- .
When any manufacturing plant two a d at relatively little coot dertaken.
is built, for example, a well- with modern dirt moving
The farm bulldmg plan books
thought-out plan is drawn up. A equipment, But developing a are being constantly updated
set of farm buildings of· good water supply can often be so those that have older ones
ten
costs
as
much very difficult and costly.
may wish to check with the
or more as a manufacTherefore, it is important Extension Office to see if there
turing plant, so a well- that the water supply situation have been changes made.
thought-out plan is just as
important for this. Two plans
can be helpful - one showing
the present arrangement (with
changes in mind ), the other
showing the final arrangement
when major building is completed .
Here Are Tarps Made Of A New
If you will eventually need a
pole barn or new home, for
Revolutionary Construction
·example, select ·a plan and fit
its size and arrangement into
For Longer Use and More Protection
the overall farmstead plan.
This then can he built to "fit"
FEATURING. , .
at a laler date. Measure the
farmslead area so you know
how much space there is to
work with. Slake out proposed
buildings, fences, trees, etc. to
gei a picture of what you pian
will eventually look like. It is
much easier and costs little to
move slakes or make changes
on paper!
Check out the water supply
at the farmstead loeation , A
good wale: supply is essential.
This is especially important
where livestoek is produced.
,.
Trees can usually be grown

TARPS

BAlANCE STRENGTH. Special woven

·canvas, .water and.rot-resistant treated.
Ends double sewed with rot-resistant
threads, rope and hem:. "

We Also Have Rubber Tarp
I

WASHINGTON(UPI)-The year-to-year drops, others in·
Agriculture Department said eluding Kansas, Oklahoma,
today Ohio's winter wheat pro- Nebraska, Missouri, Montana,
spects are estimated at nearly Texas, Oregon, Colorado,
·half of last year's production. Idaho and Cal'1ornia had much .
The 1973 crop was estimated brighter prospects for 1973.
on Dec. I conditions as being
The national crop forecast,
25,?:12,000 bushels. That would aided by extra acreage devoted
he a decline of more than 21 to wheat this winter, was for a
million bushels from the total record 1,?:17,848,000 bushels, up
which Ohio farmers harvested ~per cent from a year ago and
a year earlier.
, some 60 million bushels higher
, While Ohio and Indiana were
among several states to show • • • •. .• • •

GALLIPOLIS Mose
Canlerherry, manager of the
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services at Galllpolis said
Saturday the Mobile Unit of the
Bureau will be located at
Pomeroy parking lot beside the
barbecue pit on Dec. 28-27-28-

•

than the prior record crop of
1968.
The Crop Board reported an
estimated 42,793,000 acres of
winler wheat were planted
across the nation, or an extra ·
546,000 acres over the prior
season,
The yield per acre planted is
estimated at 29.9 bushels for
the 1973 crop, compared to 28.1 '
bushels for 1972.

Tie-Down Fasteners

Each Tarp Carries A Factory
Written Guarantee .. All Sizes
SO, FORA REAL BUY, SEE
YOUR FARM SUPPLY SUPER
MARKET

CENTRAL SOYA

OF OHIO
Gallipolis, Ohio

Grain Prices
GQLUMBUS (UPI) - Average cash grain prices (per bu.)
paid to farmers by grain elevators in the principal marketing areas of Ohio after the
market closed on Friday efter-'
nooil untll the liiarket cklles on
Tuesday.
'Northeast Ohio; No. 2 wheat
2.52 higher; NO, ¥• Sh. Corn
1.43 lower; No. 2 oats 1.02 unchanged; No. I soybeiiiiB 3,82
sharply lower;
Northwest Ohio ; No. 2wheat
2.52higher; No, 2Sh. corn 1.42;
No. 2 oats 1.00 IUIChanged; No.
I soybeans sharply lower.
Central Ohio; No. 2 wheat
2.56 higher; No.2 Sh. corn 1.52
lower; No, 2 oats 1.02 unchanged; No. 1 soybeans 3.91
sharply lower.
Southwest Ohio ; No. 2 wheat
2.49 higher: No, 2 Sh. corn 1.45
lower; No. 2 oats 1.03 unchanged; No. I soybeans 3.89
sharply lower.
Ear corn generally 2 cents
per bu. less.

MAKES CUTTING
TWICE-AS-EASY
-.

FRONT TRIGGER
For easier control in
close quarters and
tricky anglesr:.~?::---I

Gravely'!! exdu11ive rotary
plow attachment gives you
a perfect seedbed in JUOt
,
one operation ...
.I!. (
no rakin(l:, diaci.ng,
or harrowin,g.
}.t.. ·~.
Plow• up to

'"''i

, · l' 1

,' \

·'i (
• ·--.11

-. · 7" deep, 8"

·;

wid•. Come
t&lt; in for dem·
( "; onstrttlon.

The Rural Manpower Ser· I ' ) ~
GtaiJifb
1.11 HP 8upn
vices facility is being used to
CAH!vmible T~
'
augment the Bureau's service
• Plow An..:m-t
to ,local cornmlUlitiea.
The services to be offered.
include regular employment
potentials, voeatlonal training
through the Manpower
Training Programs, On-the·
Job Training, Job Corps,
Counseling and Aptitude
Testing, Employer Contacts
and Job Development as well
as Community Employment 1913 Models are here.
Purchase your Gr~vely
Needs.
Tractor
now, at Special
Persoos desiring lnfonnaUon Winter Prices,
and 1 sso.oo
concerning these opportunities deposit will hold your por.
ahould come to the Mobile Unit chaw until April 1, 1973.
Bring your Gravely in lor
Tuesday, 10 a.m. • 4 p.m. tune-up
or OYerftavl now and
Wednesday and Thursday 9 save ...
a.m. to 4 p.m. and Friday, 8
25%
a.m. to noon.
ON LABOR COST

... .....,

FEATURES

OPTIONAl
BY MOST
MANU-

.

in Pomeroy
four days

29.

l

I'
'

.Iroine .made Winter wheat prospects had/
director of
Chris-Craft

UCL
, A akes
.m a

.

Books explain how to start the farmstead wholly from scratch

·Rio Tournament
Indiana team

..

· 19-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SWlday, Dec. 24, 197l

~

,f\GREETINGS

at
Seasonal excitement is in the air as
spirits mount. To all our good patrons
go sincere thanks. .

Federal Land Bank Asioc. ·
Wilker;-··

FEE .BOOSTED
VIRGINIA · CITY, Nev .
(UPI) - It will cost 17,000
more nerl year to get a lkt~~~e
for a hou. of proatituUon in
$!Grey ~ty. County Commirlzm Fl'lday boosted the
btlll fee to A$,000.,

REAR TRIGGER
Makes faster work
of cutting firewood
or lumber.
• TM Trademark of Homel.ite, a division of Textron Inc.

POMEROY LANDMARK

Graely Tractor
Sales and S.vice
ttl-2f7!
·~meroy,O,

12111-10

Jack W. Carsey, Manager
Ph. 992-2161
Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
Store Open Mon.-Sat. Tii6-Station Open 24 Hours

'

.

�•.

11- !'he Sunday Times- Sentinel, SIUlday, Dec. 24, j972

edges .Concord

~-:

~College results

•Y.

'

'

College BK B Results
By United Press lnteni~tion~l
East
Marshall 74 Morhed St. 71
John Jay 2 Hunler O, forfeit
Brown 77 New Hamp. 71
St.Jos.Pa. 90 San Jse St. 76
C.W.Posl74 Wagner 57
Dei.Sf. 101 Slsbry Sl. 81
LaSalle
92 W. Chesler 52
RIO GRANDE - Coach Steven Schoenherr's
well-disciplined Northwood of Indiana Blue Devils, Maryland 88 South
Geo. Wash. 79
So.
Car.
88
Indiana
85
doWn 12 points, 22-10, with 10:19 remaining in the
Va . Union 86 Cent, St. 67
first half, .came storming back to hand Coach Ira Howard lOS Morehse 83
70 Kent St: 63
Blankenship's Concord, W, Va., Mountain Lions Clemson
Tulane 69 Ga. Tech 68
their first basketball setback of the 1972-73 cam- LSU 67 Florida 54
,
paign h,ere Friday night, 84-77.
· Va , lech 71 Richmond 61
· Midwest ·
Thus the Blue Devils captured the Second Villanova 54 Detroit 41
Annual Rio Grande College Holiday Invitational Wayne Sf. 97 BIIQ. St. 84
La, 76
Basketball Tournament. Northwood defeated West Bradl~y 108 NE
West
Virginia Siate 81-71 in a first round game Thursday Ida. Sf. 89 uc,s .B. 79
Southern Cal 75 Ill. 72
night.
UCLA 89 PI Its burgh 73
Oregon
68 Gonzaga 56
West Virginia Slate captured 2-5. The Jackets are J.ii.
No. Car. 64 California 61
third place tournament honors
Coach Curtis Price's Yellow Stanford 77 Fordham 54
·tntl City Classic
by downing host Rio Grande 93- Jackets grabbed an early lead,
AI
Long Beach, Calif.
. 82 in Friday's consolation and was up by seven, 36-28,
(lsi round)
battle. .
.
. with six minutes left' in the first LoyoJa.&lt;;al. 92 UC lrvne 58
·Long Beach 104 LIU 62
Coach Art Lanhain's Rf!l- half.
• U, Conn. Classic
men had dropped Thursday's
With Ron Lambert leadmg
AI Storrs, Conn.
opening tilt to Concord, 94-84,
(lst round) 1 a
the Rio attack, the Redmen
Syracuse 78 Yale 72
In Friday's championship
pulled within one, 35-34, with
Harvard 80 Conn. 70
contest,. Jerome Smyre, 6-3
Dayton Classic
3:34 left in tbe half. West
senior fonrard hit four
AI
Dayton, Ohio
Virginia State led CS-40
(lsi roundl
slralebt jump sboiB from
during the halftime lnAlabama 74 Fla. St. 68
afar aa lbe previously liD•
Daylon 73 Nrlhwslrn 66
termiuion.
beaten Uons zommed to a 9-Z
Roadrunner Invitational
The YeUow Jackets moved to
At Las Cruces, N.M.
lead during lbe first four
a 57-47 advantage with 15!16
(lsi round I
minutes of play.
SIU.Crbndle
75 Xavler-0: 65
left in the game. ' Rio came
'!'he West VirginiaOS' were on storming·back during the next New Mex. St. 86 VMI 57
'
top 18-6 with 12':24 lefl in the seven minutes · to reduce the
LAMBEET SCORES- Rio Grande's 6.4 junior captain, Rort Lal)lbert, forward, pops in a
half, and led 2i-10 at the 10:19 Jackets lead to two, 69.67, with
OHIO COLLECE
twiniJOinter in this action Shot of Friday's consolatjon g~me of the Second Annual Rio Grande
BASKETBALL SCORES
mark when the tide began to 8:02 left in the game:·
Holiday Invitational Basketball Tournament. Lambert finlshe&lt;l the game with 26 points. That's
.iniled Press International
turn.
Rio's Mike Rouse behind Yellow Jackets' Rance Berry, 43, and Rodney Gilmer, 51. On left is
Th·e Redmen, however, Ashland 116 Millon (Wis.J 80
With the toilrnB!IIent's most began fouling, and the Jackets Wright State 52 Cleveland Slate
West Virginia state'sRon Calloway, 31. Rio lost, 93-82. (Steve Wilson photos).
valuable player, Larry Weher, took advantage of the situation 48
, (Capital City Classi&lt;l
6-5 jlUlior forward, pacing .the . at the foul circle, pulling away Capital 79 Valparaiso (Ind.) 77
Blue Devils' attack, Northwood to an 83-73 lead with 4:07 left. Wayne Stale (Mich.)97 Buflalo
Stale (N, Y,) 84 (cons.)
kf!Pt banging away at the
Rio Holiday Tournament
Alfred Vance, 6-() sophomore
Concord's advantage. Finally,
Northwood
82 Concord
guard, led the winners with 31 (W, Va.l 77 (Ind.)
'
!Champ.)
the Blue Devils to:ok their first
points. Dwight Street, 6-6 Wesl Virginia Stale 93 Rio
lead of the game, 28-25, on a tip· senior forward popped in 17 for Grande 82 (cons,)
in by Weber with 4:11
Univers~tY of Dayton ,
the winners, Bill Matthews
Invitational
remaining in the half.
added II.
Alabama 74 Florida State 68
During the riext three
For the Redmen, :lton Dayton 73 Northwestern 66
minutes, the lead exchanged Lambert, captain, dropped In
hands five times. Kev Snow's
long jumper put Northwood 26 points. Doug Hart added 1i,
and Steve Bartram 13.
ffi
ahead30-29 with 1:43left in the
The Jackets controlled both
half. The Blue Devils were
boards, hau.ling down 52
never headed.
reboWlds compared to 32 by
Northwood led 38-35 during Rio.
Street picked off 11
the halftime intermission.
rebolUlds to pace the winners.
After C. W. Cia)'\or'ssbtrt Lambert snagged II for Rio. •
jumper cut lbe Devlll' ~d . 'Rio hij aa of !llllt~tlle,ifield
ro~
1
to one openla&amp; secelld ~ tor 3U pet. The Rednlen were
United ' Press International
play, NorCinraod mabatalaed
UCLA's top-ranked Bruins
18 of ?:l at the foul circles,
a fouf IG 10 poillt lead lbe
welcomed
back Coach Joha
West VIrginia Slate shot a
r~a!Dder of the evening.
sizzling SU pet. from the Wooden Friday night in the
With 4:21 left in the game,
field, hitting 39 of 72 shots. only way they knew he would
Concord trailed 76-66. The
The Jackets were 15 of 25 appreciate - by winning.
Lions made a last ditch effort
The · victory, which came
from lbe foul circles.
to Pull it out of the fire,
Rio had 19 turnovers, the against twir toughest foes of
reducing tbe Oevill' lead to winners had 22 miscues.
the year, gave the Bruins an
foul' points, 711-72, with 3:06left,
even
50 straight triumphs Following the finals, the allbut the Indiana quintet held on, tournament team was named ten short of the all-time major
'
sinkiJ11 sis foul abota during and most valuable player college win streak set by the
.
the final minute of play.
&lt;X&gt;N&lt;X&gt;RD'S
Bill Smith (44) drives Inside Northwood's defense for a layup during Friday's
award was presented, along Bill Russell-led University of
Weber Jed all scorers with 33 with the first and second place San Francisco.
championship game at Rio's Lyne Center. Others left to right are Mark Sandy, Concord; &amp;&gt;b
poinls. Mike Oden, 6-4 Blue team trophies.
Lane, Northwood, Milt Arrington, Concord and Mike Oden, Northwood.
Wooden, who missed the first
Devil 1tenlor from Columbus,
Rio Grande's next outing is game of his 25-year UCLA
added 13 for the winners. Paul in the Findlay Boosters coaching career last Saturday
Weeks letaied 10,
•
OHIO HIGH. SCHOOL
Tournament; Dec. 27 and 28 at when he was hospitalized for a
BASKETBALL
SCORES
For the Lions, Smyre
week because of a mild ·heart
Findlay. •
By United Press International
finished with 20 markers. Mark
Dover 79 Coshocton 46
Box scores of Friday's condition, watched his team
Claymont
91 Meadowbrook 69
Smith added 18 and Bill Smith games;
overcome a good performance
.
Pfsmlh
West
78 Ptsmth Notre
17.
by
the
University
of
Pittsburgh
Dame
69
(Consolotion Gamel
The victory pushed NorthPtsmth East 6? Jackson 54
WEST
VIRGINIA STATE and a 37-point scoring effort by '
Pfsmth 83 washington C.H..64
wood's aeason mark to 8-2, (93)- Berry
3-2·8; Gilmer 0·2· Panther forward Bill Knight to
Ridgewood 91 Kidron , C. C. 68
ConcQI'd dropped to 5-I on the 2; Howard 3·0·6; Ingram o.o.o; win, 89-73.
Canton
C.C. 47 Garaway 44
Mafl~ews5- 1 · 11 ;Peterson 0-0.0;
year.
West
Holmes
76 Cloverleaf 71
Knight hit on 17 of 32 shots
Street 8-1-17; Vaden 2-6·10;
Riverdale 70 Ada 57
Coach Art Lanham's Red- Vance 14·3·31; Calloway 4.0.8; from the floor but even that
Bellefontaine 60 Lima C.C. 58
men lrafled all the way in the Lewis 0·0·0. TOTALS 39-IS-93. was not enough to compensate
Lima
Shawnee 64 Sidney 43
R 10 GRANDE 1121 Wapakoneta
70 Defiance 61
consolation em test. Rio Is now Bartram
5,J. t3; Hart 8·1-17; for the overall team play
Paulding
70 Van Wert 53
Thompson 1-2-4; Fausnaugh 0· exhibited by the Bruins. AllSpringfield C,C. 51 Piqua 47
NUXHAU. SIGNS
o.o; liose 2·0·41 Stewart 1·0·2;
Miam i Easl 73 Fairlawn 64
CINCINNATI - The ol' Rouse 2·1-51 Bollinger 3-3-9; American cenler Bill Walton
Mendon Unlon71 Marion Local
Larnbert 10·6-26; Wade 0·2·2. and Keith Wilkes combined lor
67
'
lefthander, Joe Nuxhall, will be TOTALS 32-18-82.
Anna
85
Jackson
Cenler
SO
38
points
for
UCLA.
"rounding third and heading
Kenton
so
Elg
in
53
IChlmpionship Gamel
for home" again during the
WHEELERSBURG- Coach Pirates, hauling down 30 Parkway 74 Coldwater 671
CONCORD (77) - Arrln~lon
Pro
St8ndings
Sl. John 60 Ayersville
1973 season, ' Nuxhall has 2·1-5; Claytor •·1 -9; DAr·
Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue rebolUlds, had seven assists, Delphos
52
signed a cont:cact ~continue as cangelo 1·0·2; King 2-0·41
' NHL Standings
Devils scrimmaged a tall an.d five steals and 17 turnovers. Lorain Admiral King 69 Fin, 8-2-18; Smith 7-3·)7 ;
By United Press International
part of the Cincmnati Reds 'sandy
The Pirates had 17 personals,
dlay 58
talented Wheelersburg quintet
Smyre H -20; Spangler 0·2·2.
East
East 68 St. Marys 54
radio broadcasting team. This TOTALS 31·15·77.
w. I. 1. pis gf ga here·Friday morning and came hit 25 of 67 field goal attempts Allen
Ft. Loramie 84 Russia 52
NORTHWOOD
1141
Snow
Montreal
20 s 8 48 132 77 out on top, 73-61. ·
will be Joe's seventh year on
for 37 pet., and sank II of 26 Cleve. St. Joseph 75 Manslld.
2-H; Broughton 3,1).6; Meyer .Soslon
22
8
3
47
153
'
1
06
throws for 42 pet. The
Sl. Peters 47
the air and he'll again be 0,4-4 ; Weber 15·3-33; Oden 6·1· NY Rangers 21 11 J 45 134 96
The Pirates, 4-2 on the year, free
, 1 , ked off 26 b d . Mansfld Senior 77 Lorain
P
working with AI Michaels on 13; Lane 2-0·4; Weeks 4-2·10 ; Buffalo
18 9 7 43 129 99 fielded a starting five which
1ra es PIC
re oun s
Senior 59
14 15 3 31 100 112 averaged over 6.'1, Wheelers- and had 15 turnovers,
the play-by-play broadcasts. Basler 4-0-8, TOTALS 36-12-84, Detroit
New Philadelphia 66 Mansfield
Toronto
9 18 5 23 98 109
·
Malabar 59 (oil
Vancouver · 9 20 5 23 100 142 burg was said to be one of the Player
Ill·•
fl.a
PI rb to Ontario 75 Clear Fork 70
Price
10 J.7 J 9 4 Willard 95 Bucyrus 18
lllllil'.,.,,..,.....,...,..,lh!MMMa.a.ltlltltllt"''lllll,.... NY Islanders 3 25 4 10 64 156 strongest physical, squads the Noe
105' 22
8·IO 5 13 5 Upper Sandusky 91 Shelby 59
West
· 3·5
Orr
·
1-3
I 2 I Plymoulh ll Lexington 54
Gallian~
have
met
all
year,
w. I. I. pb gl ga
S8 3
Kiesling
1
Chicago
20 10 2 42 122 83 including scrimmages and Sheets
·6 ·• 1 12 0 Gallon 55 Norwalk Senior 53
2
2 Hillsdale 68 Smithville 51
Minnesota
i8 12 ~ 39 117 94 regular season play.
. o.o
Berridge
4-60·0020
Phlla
16 15 4 36 125 124
1·2 0-0
, Crestview 54 Cresll ine 48 .
Niday
Pillsburgh
15 14 3 33 121 106 The rugged Pirates held a 14- Singer
o.o o.o 01 01 21 Brooklyn 73 North Roya lion 60
Atlanta
15 16 5 35 94 107 12 advantage following one
0. 1 0_0 3 0 2 Aurora 41 Chardon 38
Los Angeles
14 16 4 32 107 107 session. Gallipolis was on top Johnson
TOTALS 28·56 17·26 15 30 17 Twinsl!urg 53 Chagrin Falls 33
St. Louis
10 IS 6 26 82 102
25-67 tl-26 17 26 15 Cleve. East Tech 94 Cleve.
Opponents
California
5 20 7 11 85 137 38-26 after two periods. The
Collinwood 76
GAHS
12 26 18 17 - 73 Cleve.
Frld1y's Results
JFK 65 Cleve, John
Gallians held a 56-44 advantage WHS
14 12 18 17~1
Adams 57
Calilornla 4 Buffalo 2
after the third session.
IOnly game scheuled)
Coach Osborne used nine
AHL Standings
By United Press International men in lhe practice tilt.
East
w. I. I. pts gl ga As a unit, !he Galiians
This Offer Good thru Jan, 1, 1973
Nova Scotia 16 9 840129 90 committed IS personals, hit 28
Rochester
16 9 6 38 111 109 of 56 field goal attempts for 50
Boston
17 14 4 38 110 121
Providence 14 11 5 33 115 101 pet. (against a Wheelersburg
With Each Oil Change
Springfield
8 16 5 21 106 126 zone) and sank 17 of 26 free
the inspiration
New Haven
7 21 6 20 107 16i throw attempts for 66 pet.
Wost
of faith a11&lt;l love fill
w. 1: I. pis gl ga The Galllans controUed the
No ~eturn
32 oz.
your heart with quiet peace
Clnclnnall
24 8 2 so 148 97 boards against the rangy
Btls.
Btls:
Hershey
15 9 7 37 117 95
and happine~J. A joyous Noel to all.
Virginia
}4 11 6 34 113 108
DOUBLE TOP VALUE STAMPS
Cleveland
10 14 7 27 119 liS
Rlc~mond
12 18 3 27 116 126 h1dlan Hill 66 Made ria 64
With Fill-up of 10 Gal. or more.
Balltmore. , S 18 7 17 77 128 Finneytown 65 Ml, Heallhy 60
Fnday s lltsulls
Glen Esle 71 Mariemont 66
Phone 446-9108
Hershey 7 Baltimore 3
Hamillon Taft 83 Cln Sl
Boston 4 Sprlnj)fleld 2
Xavier 70
·
·
New
HavenS
Richmond
3
Cln
.
Elder
67
Cln.
Woodward
39
St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Rochester 3 Providence 2
Princeton 103 Hamilton
Gallipolis,
IOnly gam~s scheduled)
Garfield 71

by _84-77 tally

.'

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
County ElJlenaion Agent,
the NEW in FARMING
· Agriculture
POMEROY - One of the available for some structures color also affect comfort
, most common req~esls of the · Or the customer may find
Included jn the Family
Cooperative Exlension Service sufficient information in one of Housing Handbook are such
is ;
U1e · books so that he can things as assessing your family
"Do you hav~ a plan for a , Pr&lt;&gt;eeect.
needs, traffic patterns,
building?" The answer is yes.
Books currenUy !vailable in devel&lt;iping a remodeling plan,
Through the Midwest Plan the f2 range are The Family storage, as. well as many
Service building plans, plan Housing Handbook, Dairy suggestions on kitchen, living
'bool\s, structures, and details. Housing and Equipment Hand- :iress, bedrooms, bathrooms
of all phases of construction book, Swine Housing and and baSements.
'
are readily available.
Equipment Handbook, and
THE HORSE ·HANDBOOK
This service is provide!~ in Horse Handbook. The Beef gives many options on styles of
Ohio through The Ohio Stale Ca!Ue Handbook is $1. For , construction, essentials for
University Agricultural those wanting a detailed planning, site selection
·Enslneering Department. handbook on structures and · layouts for stalls, as well a~
Headquarlers for the service is enviromnent a complete book many {eatures and pieees of
at Iowa State University, is available for $5.
equipment. Soine of the inAmes, ldwa. Thirteen stales
An inleresting comment in teresting itetns listed include
cooperate in providing this the Family Housing Handbook, automatic gates, latches
service.
while directed to us, also ap- hinges, windbreak fences'
In Meigs County our ex- plies to livestock. The author Dutch doors, show box and
lension office atlempts to keep points out that "creating llving malerials.
,
'
one or two copies of each'book spaces in which people can be · With increased interest in
on hand at all limes so those truly comfortable Is a con- ecology, the manure handling
inleresteq can come in, look at tin.uing challenge to designers, seCtion ~n the Dairy Housing
them, and if they decide to take builders, and families."
and Equipment Handbook is of
one, buy it on the spot. If they
Comfort conditioning of a paJilcular interest to farmers.
wish to . examine it more house means more than just Some,of the recommendations
carefully, then arrangements temperature and moisture on ·solid manure handling
·
are made to loan the book for a control. Your ability to follow: .
period of
maintain a comfortable house
- Haul manure directly to
For those trying to figure out will depend, in part, on sOIUld fields when possible. When a
. what they would like to do in construction - tight windows, stockpile Is necessary, Joeale it
regara , to building, a free adequate insulation, heating for convenient loading in a
broehure is provided listing all and cooling equipment, etc. spreader, out of natural
of the books, plans, digests, Other factors such as space, drainageways, and away from
homes, and !qulpment systems sound, dirt, privacy, llght, and any water source, Divert
available, In some caSes this
provides all the client wishes,
Detailed working drawings are

time. ·

. HE~ FOR LOCKER ROOM -Rio Grande Coach Art
Lanham and :Ri9 Redmen leave for the locker room tra!Ung
West Virginia State 4S..O during the halftime intermisalon of
Friday's consolation holiday tournament game.

'

Galliasales
'

_,. tax revenue up

in November

it 50 wins

..

GAHS Wlns
•
scrzmmage
tilt 73~61·

'1
TOUGH MAN ro STOP -Northwood of Indiana's Mike
Oden ( 42) a 6.4 senior forward from Columbus, fires a
jumper from the side for two of his 13 points in the Blue
Devils' 84-77 championship vi~ory over Concord at Lyne
Center Friday night. Lions on right are Mark Sandy (24) and
Jerome Smyre ( 20).

FREE LUBE JOB

roay

PEPSI or 7-UP
4
'1

J. D. "orth Produce Co.

SMITH &amp;HAll ErS. ASHlAND

Vine

l

o.

!
i

l
j

1.
j

J
'l'
I

•./

&lt;We're teomins up
with Santa and hir
reinrle•r to bring you
happy halldtly wirhtr.

i

..''
'

'•I

JACKSON

'

PRODUCTION
CREDIT, ASSOC. .
Dick Sterrett,
Manager

COLUMBUS - Ohio sales
tax collections iri Gallia CoWlty
for the reporting period from
Nov.ltoNov.30,1972showeda
POMPANO BEACH, Fla.$9,047.74 increase above George M. Irvine, Jr .,
collections for the same month president oflhe bOat division of
of last year, according to Chris-Craft Industries, Inc.,
figures released Saturday by the world's largest builder of
Gertrude Donally, State motor boats, was elected a
Treasurer.
director of the company by the
Collecting for the period, shareholders at their annual
Nov. I through Nov. 30 totaled meeting Dec. 19, ·
$56,044.90 as compared to
Irvine has been president of
$46,997.16 the same month in the Chris-Craft Boat Division
1971.
,
since June 12, in charge of the
The state treasurer also company's worldwide boat
reported a slight increase in operations, including 10 boat
the year-to-date sales \ax and engine manufactqring and
cpliectioris in Galiia County . distribution facilities in the
'· "~~J eoliee,tions of t;144,122.~ . United Slates, Italy, Swit·
period of July 1, 1972 to zeriand and Taiwan.
·
Nov. 30, 1972 as c9mpared to
Irvine recently returned
$337,816.47 for the period from from making a survey of the
July I, 1971 to Nov. 30, 1971.
recreation boating industry in
Motor ~hide taxes collected Europe and visiting the In·
during November in Gallia ternational Boat Show at
ColUlty totaled $31,576.19, an Genoa, Italy, and Chris..,'raft
increase of $1,031.76 over last · facilities in Italy and Swityear.
zerland,
Chris-Craft Industries also
owns television stations In Los
Angeles and Portland, Oregon
and is a manufacturer of inWILL NOT LEAVE
dustrial and agricultural
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UPI) chemicals, plastics and fiber
- Coach Bear Bryant said and foam products, C-CI
Friday that he has no intention operates a plant in Gallipolis,
''under any circumstances" of Ohio manufacturing small
leaving the University of craft engine employing apAlabama to take the head proximately 100 persons.
coaching job of the New
Orleans Saints of the National
Football League,
Bryant said that he will pay
Saints' General Manager Dick
Gordon "strictly a soctal visit"
after the bowl season and "the
many meetings scheduled in
,January," but '1ootball will
not be involved in any form."

Mobile unit

.......

~-,._

12'x60' MARLETTE
'

•'

MANY

FACTURERS
STANDARD

FOR
~

'

•'

.,
~

!) '

1

HOURS, 9-8 Monday thru Friday
9-5 Sot. S,UNDAY CLOSED

·

g~~~
MOBILE
HOME
1M Jim Staats or Jot Gllet

Upp~r

Rt. 1 Next Door to

PhoM446-f340

surface water away from the
storage area.
- Check local regulations for
recommended runoff control
systems: II no regulation
exists, collect manure runoff
from stoekpites or lots in a
detention pond if runoff may
cause pollution.
- Many Meigs County
farmers have already constnicted labOr saving loading
ramps for handling manu~ .
Loading ramp~ facilitates
loading solids into a spreader
· with a scraper blade. Note that
, drainage is away from the
ramp: ·
OTHER SPECIAL ITEMS in
the Dairy Handbook are a
tilting-cow table, SIUI shades,
corrals, headgales, calf pens
and stalls, and feeding bunks
and feeding fences.
There are several problems
in the construction of buildings.
PJ:obaply two of the most
common are having the
building when it Is desired or
needed, but. more important
than this possibly is the
planning ahead of the actual
construction, Adequate and
thorough planning before
construction is started means
when the building is completed
it will be of the quality &amp; construction desired and will serve
the' owner fQ.r many years in
the future. Too many people do

not plan ahead.
An example was observed
years ago when .a family
needed help on a kitchen plan.
Because they had already
constructed ~ . doorway a
refrigerator had to be put in an
awkward place. If this had
been planned ahead of time a
6-in. change in the location of
lhe doorway would have
provided a well-Planned kitchen,'
Few of us . have the opportunity to start from scratch,
that is, lay o~t the entire farmstea !I and construct its
buildings, However if we would
consider the entire farmstead
every lime we make a change,
we rilight he much farther
ahead. ·.
Buildings are an essential
part of every farm operation.
Some two-thirds or more of
total working time on a
livestock farm is spent in and
around .the builamgs area,
Sooner or later each building is
remodeled or replaced.
If several buildings will be
built new or remodeled, either
at one time or over a period of
years, take a close look at your
present farms lead site. This is
especially important before
erecting a new home. The
home is one of the more expeosive and permanent
buildings on a farmslead.

· ·

A carefully studied farm- and other wind protection is determined and taken Into
stead plan on paper is im- developed. Poor drainage can account .before exte'OSive
portant to avoid problems. he corrected in usually a day or building projects are · un- .
When any manufacturing plant two a d at relatively little coot dertaken.
is built, for example, a well- with modern dirt moving
The farm bulldmg plan books
thought-out plan is drawn up. A equipment, But developing a are being constantly updated
set of farm buildings of· good water supply can often be so those that have older ones
ten
costs
as
much very difficult and costly.
may wish to check with the
or more as a manufacTherefore, it is important Extension Office to see if there
turing plant, so a well- that the water supply situation have been changes made.
thought-out plan is just as
important for this. Two plans
can be helpful - one showing
the present arrangement (with
changes in mind ), the other
showing the final arrangement
when major building is completed .
Here Are Tarps Made Of A New
If you will eventually need a
pole barn or new home, for
Revolutionary Construction
·example, select ·a plan and fit
its size and arrangement into
For Longer Use and More Protection
the overall farmstead plan.
This then can he built to "fit"
FEATURING. , .
at a laler date. Measure the
farmslead area so you know
how much space there is to
work with. Slake out proposed
buildings, fences, trees, etc. to
gei a picture of what you pian
will eventually look like. It is
much easier and costs little to
move slakes or make changes
on paper!
Check out the water supply
at the farmstead loeation , A
good wale: supply is essential.
This is especially important
where livestoek is produced.
,.
Trees can usually be grown

TARPS

BAlANCE STRENGTH. Special woven

·canvas, .water and.rot-resistant treated.
Ends double sewed with rot-resistant
threads, rope and hem:. "

We Also Have Rubber Tarp
I

WASHINGTON(UPI)-The year-to-year drops, others in·
Agriculture Department said eluding Kansas, Oklahoma,
today Ohio's winter wheat pro- Nebraska, Missouri, Montana,
spects are estimated at nearly Texas, Oregon, Colorado,
·half of last year's production. Idaho and Cal'1ornia had much .
The 1973 crop was estimated brighter prospects for 1973.
on Dec. I conditions as being
The national crop forecast,
25,?:12,000 bushels. That would aided by extra acreage devoted
he a decline of more than 21 to wheat this winter, was for a
million bushels from the total record 1,?:17,848,000 bushels, up
which Ohio farmers harvested ~per cent from a year ago and
a year earlier.
, some 60 million bushels higher
, While Ohio and Indiana were
among several states to show • • • •. .• • •

GALLIPOLIS Mose
Canlerherry, manager of the
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services at Galllpolis said
Saturday the Mobile Unit of the
Bureau will be located at
Pomeroy parking lot beside the
barbecue pit on Dec. 28-27-28-

•

than the prior record crop of
1968.
The Crop Board reported an
estimated 42,793,000 acres of
winler wheat were planted
across the nation, or an extra ·
546,000 acres over the prior
season,
The yield per acre planted is
estimated at 29.9 bushels for
the 1973 crop, compared to 28.1 '
bushels for 1972.

Tie-Down Fasteners

Each Tarp Carries A Factory
Written Guarantee .. All Sizes
SO, FORA REAL BUY, SEE
YOUR FARM SUPPLY SUPER
MARKET

CENTRAL SOYA

OF OHIO
Gallipolis, Ohio

Grain Prices
GQLUMBUS (UPI) - Average cash grain prices (per bu.)
paid to farmers by grain elevators in the principal marketing areas of Ohio after the
market closed on Friday efter-'
nooil untll the liiarket cklles on
Tuesday.
'Northeast Ohio; No. 2 wheat
2.52 higher; NO, ¥• Sh. Corn
1.43 lower; No. 2 oats 1.02 unchanged; No. I soybeiiiiB 3,82
sharply lower;
Northwest Ohio ; No. 2wheat
2.52higher; No, 2Sh. corn 1.42;
No. 2 oats 1.00 IUIChanged; No.
I soybeans sharply lower.
Central Ohio; No. 2 wheat
2.56 higher; No.2 Sh. corn 1.52
lower; No, 2 oats 1.02 unchanged; No. 1 soybeans 3.91
sharply lower.
Southwest Ohio ; No. 2 wheat
2.49 higher: No, 2 Sh. corn 1.45
lower; No. 2 oats 1.03 unchanged; No. I soybeans 3.89
sharply lower.
Ear corn generally 2 cents
per bu. less.

MAKES CUTTING
TWICE-AS-EASY
-.

FRONT TRIGGER
For easier control in
close quarters and
tricky anglesr:.~?::---I

Gravely'!! exdu11ive rotary
plow attachment gives you
a perfect seedbed in JUOt
,
one operation ...
.I!. (
no rakin(l:, diaci.ng,
or harrowin,g.
}.t.. ·~.
Plow• up to

'"''i

, · l' 1

,' \

·'i (
• ·--.11

-. · 7" deep, 8"

·;

wid•. Come
t&lt; in for dem·
( "; onstrttlon.

The Rural Manpower Ser· I ' ) ~
GtaiJifb
1.11 HP 8upn
vices facility is being used to
CAH!vmible T~
'
augment the Bureau's service
• Plow An..:m-t
to ,local cornmlUlitiea.
The services to be offered.
include regular employment
potentials, voeatlonal training
through the Manpower
Training Programs, On-the·
Job Training, Job Corps,
Counseling and Aptitude
Testing, Employer Contacts
and Job Development as well
as Community Employment 1913 Models are here.
Purchase your Gr~vely
Needs.
Tractor
now, at Special
Persoos desiring lnfonnaUon Winter Prices,
and 1 sso.oo
concerning these opportunities deposit will hold your por.
ahould come to the Mobile Unit chaw until April 1, 1973.
Bring your Gravely in lor
Tuesday, 10 a.m. • 4 p.m. tune-up
or OYerftavl now and
Wednesday and Thursday 9 save ...
a.m. to 4 p.m. and Friday, 8
25%
a.m. to noon.
ON LABOR COST

... .....,

FEATURES

OPTIONAl
BY MOST
MANU-

.

in Pomeroy
four days

29.

l

I'
'

.Iroine .made Winter wheat prospects had/
director of
Chris-Craft

UCL
, A akes
.m a

.

Books explain how to start the farmstead wholly from scratch

·Rio Tournament
Indiana team

..

· 19-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SWlday, Dec. 24, 197l

~

,f\GREETINGS

at
Seasonal excitement is in the air as
spirits mount. To all our good patrons
go sincere thanks. .

Federal Land Bank Asioc. ·
Wilker;-··

FEE .BOOSTED
VIRGINIA · CITY, Nev .
(UPI) - It will cost 17,000
more nerl year to get a lkt~~~e
for a hou. of proatituUon in
$!Grey ~ty. County Commirlzm Fl'lday boosted the
btlll fee to A$,000.,

REAR TRIGGER
Makes faster work
of cutting firewood
or lumber.
• TM Trademark of Homel.ite, a division of Textron Inc.

POMEROY LANDMARK

Graely Tractor
Sales and S.vice
ttl-2f7!
·~meroy,O,

12111-10

Jack W. Carsey, Manager
Ph. 992-2161
Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
Store Open Mon.-Sat. Tii6-Station Open 24 Hours

'

.

�'

. 00 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, SWlday, Dec. 24, 1972

21-The SUndayTimes-Sentinei,SUnday, Dec. 24, 1972

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
NOTICE

WANT- ADS

10% Discount

For Rent

·usED CAR

Business Services
PWMBING
HEATING

_EARTH MOVING

'

se-cutive inSer tions.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads pa id within 10 da.ys,
CARD OF T!IANKS
&amp; O~ITUARV
·

Additional 25c Ch arg e per
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOURS
8: 30a .m. to 5 : 00p . m . Daily ,
8 : 30

a .m. to

Saturday.

12 :00

i2-S-Ifc

- -- - TWO new mobile homes, never

No on

and good ·neighbors for their

kihdness ,

lhoughffulness. the lovely
flOwers, good food, the useful
gifts, beautiful cards and
special prayers. we lake this

unf urnis hed

Phone 992-5434.

apa d ments .

- - -- -.

i2·22 ·61p

Pomeroy. 0 .

EXPERIENCES
12-24-ltp WANTED:
SPECIALTY SALESMAN TO
ESTABLISH • NEW AC .
In Memory
COUNTS. GUARANTEED
WEEKLY DRAW AGAINS;
I"! MEMORY of Charles and COMMISSIONS.
One-call
~anie Snider: Dearest Mom
cl0$.er, such as man who ha"s
and Dad, this is the first year
successfully sold land, inwithout both of you. Dad has
surance, mutual funds, hom e
been gone lot quite awhile;
improvements,
franchises .
oh, but still the wonderful
vending.
freeze~:
plans.
memories we keep of him;
education,
etc
.
Can
have
and only last year Mom went
bright
future
with
nationally
to , loin him. Only one who
advertised &lt;;Ompany. Ex ·
knOINs the hurt knows how
tremely hig~ earnings
much we loved you and how
potential
. Our top producers
much we miss you at Christ·
earn
commissions
of 525,000
mas lime and all through the
to $50,000 per year. lflou can
ear. Sadly missed by your
travel extensively an have a
r.ovtng children.
car , we'll prove it to you .
good
12-24-llp
.
.
For additional informatioh
and personal interview, call

Mr. Porter. toll free at (8001
621-1006. (800) 621 -8182. (800)
621-7501 .
12·24·1fp

INTERNATIONAL Songwriters
Club; recording, publishing,
free membership; write
i.S.C., Rt. 1, Box 210, Mid· FOR THE poslllon of half. time
dteport, Ohio 45760.
4-H Program Assistant .
12·22-6tc
,
Contact fhe County Extension
Office In the basement of the
I WILL NOT be responsll&gt;le for
COIIMjl ~om.-. Phone 992-3895
any debts contracted by
tor details. The Cooperative
anyone other !han myself.
Extension Service Is an Equal
Signed: Basil L Hayne 0, Rt ..
Opportunity Employer.
1. M'ddleport, Ohio.
Training beyond high school
12·22-31p
is desired but not required.
Applicant must have a car
HAYMAN'S Auction - a good
ava ilable.
place to go each Frlday
12· 24- 31~
evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west of WE'LL SEND
BRIGHT,
Rock Springs Fairground.
YOUNG MEN TO SCHOOL
10-10-ffc
FOR RADAR JOBS IN
EUROPE . II you'd like to live
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS.
and work in Europe , there' s
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
an exciting job walling for
PHONE HELEN JANE
ou with tod~y·s Army. You'll
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT,
r.
earn to Gupervise and crn1rol
OH 10 992·5113.
ground surveillance radar
12-3·ffc
units. With full pay wh ile
you're
in school. And lots ot
THERE will be no Shooting
other
benefits.
Like 30 days
Match atthe Racine Gun Club
aid
vacation
a
year
. If you' re
this weekend due to Christ.
ooking
for
this
kind of
mas Holldavs.

r.

challenge and exc itement,

Today's Army wants to join
you. For complete details call
collect SS G. Clark 593-3022.
12·20-6tc
OLD Furn iture, oak tables ,
organs, dishes, clocks . brass
beds, or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oll io. Call 992-6271.
.
6-28-lfc

Auto Sales
i967 FUR Y Ill , 4 door, 383
engine, good condi tion , S800;

Freddie Thabet, Mason, w.
Va .; phone 773-565i .
12-1 5-tt c

~OI.lfl'JOS

house broken. Wil l hold for
Chrl stm ~s .

of

business .

!-Fruit

124- Heavanly body
12$--Cries Hkt crow

6-Confenton

62-Part of fl ower

div:slo rt
127-Kits
129- Silly smile
131-Tibetan priest
132- L•mb' s pen

ll-Perhin in&amp; to

the stars

64- French article

65- Sun 1od

18-AIIude

66-lanore

19-o-Body of water
20--Aarlcultu(e
21-climblnl
plants
.
23-River in Siberia

24-Anl•r

67- F..JIIs short
69-Coins
71- Mohammedan
commander
H - Enltven
74- Tidlns:s

26--Ratlonal
27-Member Of
Parll1mtnt
(abbr.)
29- Bury
30-Burden
31-Cry of

76-Repatt
79-Caudal
appendaij:n
81 - Fon dle
82- Siender finial
84-Destitute
85-Astant

Bacc::hanats
32-Wine cup

87-Chalr

33--Rutt.ltn
vlll•l•
complement
35-Athlet+c- 1roup
36-Crawls

95-Piay strlnJed
lnstrul'fiant
97- Put on ca lf

31--Adlust
4CJ-oewn pddest
41-fqQih baby
carlia1•
42--F.rm bulldlna

4.J:-Dine

4~rtllt's stand

46-A tontl"tllt

(sbbr,)
47-Comely
41--Writh'l
lmplemenla

4t-MoWnc

51-Unit of l(llian

134- Spread for

drying

136-Abound
137- 0oom
13 8- Hard sUic:a
139 -~ te a m s hip

(abbr.)
140- Roekllfh
1• 1-Southwestern
Indian
142-Too
143- lnd/an te nt
144 ~St rnllled

146----f'lng:er
148-Mortifl caticn
149- F'In al

150-cea,es

mound
98-Man's
nlckn11me
99-Eldttt
101-Wrlt1tn list
J03-Paddlt
104-Propllet

1!1 1- Havlni'
offensive stnel l

DOWN
t ~ Resps

105-ltem of
proj:ltrty

10$-Nothlna
110--completely
112-bltt
113-Kind .
U4-Symbol for

111non

currency
12-A stat. (abbr.l

115-Fishlnr duel(

5~trt

117-Royal

of t•c•

animals

92-Confederate

aeneral
93-Strlct

&amp;f-(:ollet• s.~ef)' 111--&lt;&gt;ce.ns
(colfoq.)
119-Cuts
55-Matter-of·f.tct · 120-Conjunction
17-Ho.. nt,old Pl1 121-Menured
III-Otlemlcat
duretidn of
compoUnd
lU-Soa~~;

land

name
133-Enclosure for

90-SitJqlahneu

34-Shlp's

1 2~0anllh

1
.f;

2;:_Renovate
3-A1 a distance
4- Footllke part
5-T•utonic dthy
6-c l'!oice part
7-Skin
8--Gi rl 's name

9-coneae dearee
(abbr.)
tO-Impelled
11 - Most

precipi tous
12-Nol e of •eale

13-l ohe nrrln
heroi ne
14 - South

American
an imal

· Air Conditioners
; Awnings
··Underpinning
servi ce

""T"

Big

price

12-22·3tc

ON YOUR DIAL

J

Real Estate For Sale
8 ROOM house and bath. nice
large lol . natural gas. built-in

22-Hostile ra ldt
23- cleyer urth
25-Fh;h sus
27-S ubstan ce
28-Bithop
30-Shalltspurlan
ki ng.
31-11 mls teken

33- Meiody
35- Journey
36-Jut:on

37- Satiatu
39- Hindu Cymba ls
41-Co uple

m odel s of m obile homes.

city ; contact ·Lou Osborne ,or

Phone area code 614-423-9531.
·
4-13-tfc

call 992-5898.

s peech
102- Boy
allendants
104- Sco rch

ll -26·tfc

c.

Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohlo45769
OVER RIVER LANO
3.33 ACRES - Brand new
i972 Fleetwood, 3 bedroom
mobile

home .

Screened

patio, drilled well. All level

BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
RacinJ&gt;, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-ftc

-CARPENTRY,
- - -repair,
--

work
additions, kitchen cabinets
and paneling ; calf Guy
Nelgler. Racine, Ohio.
12-22·3!&lt;

with ·road to river. A .won-

derful place for
$21,500.00.
l1S ACRES ·
HUNT! NG LAND -

only
With

gas well, 6 room house, barn,
and several other buildings
in need of repair . We are

asking $20,000.00.
BUNGALOW
2 BEDROOMS - Nice bath,
large living and kitchen .

. CLELAND
REALTY

Next door to store on level

Pomeroy

lot. Only $4,500.00.
98 ACRES and
MOBILE HOME LOT With well and electric. The
rest is wild land, Jldeal' for
sell frig of plries . .-,'jjro~Jctng ·
gas well and minerals. Only
Si6.500.00.
ONE ACRE
T. P.
water,
electric
available. Some trees. Only
52500.00.
SYRACUSE
5 ROOMS - Bath. nice
kitchen, front and back
perches . Full basement and
large extra lot . Only
$10.600.00.
2 YEARS OLD
NEAR RACINE - 2nicesize
bedrooms

with

closets .

Utility room and large
modern ki1chen . Carport and
1;, acre .. Asking $14,000.00.

NEW LISTING
NEASE SETTLEMENT - 3
bedrooms, nice closets in
each, large modern kitchen

with bar. Utility room with
washer and dryer hookups.
Stove, and refrigerator included in sale. Now the price

is just $12,500.00.
HAVING SOLD A NUMBER
OF HOMES, WITH A VERY
SUCCESSFUL YEAR, WE
NOW .NEED SEVERAL
GOOD
PROPERTIES ,
PRICED RIGHT, FOR THE
NEW YEAR. WE WANT TO
THANK ALL OF YOU FOR
MAKING IT POSSI.BLE.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
992-3325

601

E.llllln

JUST RENOVATED
MIDDLEPORT - ~ story
frame, 2 bedrooms, dining
roqm, ' path;. ~6, f) ., flying
room, carpeted throughout, 2
car carport. $12,500.00.
LARGE COLONIAL
?OMEROY - RECENTLY
RENOVATED - The kif·
chen Is a house wife's dream,

EVERYTHING BUlL 1' IN,' 4
bedrooms, 2 balhs,. uliflty R.
carpeted. EXCELLENT
STREET. $17,500.00.
.85 ACRE
RACINE - Beautiful older
home, new kltch~n. 9 rooms.
5 bedrooms, p;, baths, full

basement, garaqe and other
buildings.
LARGE 2 STORY
MIDDLEPORT
5
bedrooms, 1112 baths, nice

Europe
106-l napect
107- Hevln&amp; made

138--Accomptlsh·
ment
14Q-klnlil
142-Tlme lOne by
143-Deflnlte

article
144- Prefi:t: down
145- Prinler's

80-Parcels of la nd
musu~
83-Roman road
147-Pronoun
148-Mu•lcal
cllrtctlon
(abbr.)

.·

For · free

3-2-tfc

clean. Retail $4860. Priced !o move.
i971 CHEVROLET BEL AIR

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
IBilll Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
4-25-ttc

ELNA and W~ite Sewing
Machines ... service on all
makes. Reasonable rates .
The Sewing Center, Mid·
dleport, Ohio. ..
ll-16-tfc

&amp; one you would like.
i965 DODGE CORONET
1565
HT Cpe., V-8 engine,. au1o m:. tic ·:rans., power steering .
bucket seats, white finish .
.

.Pomeroy Motor Co.

G &amp; E APPLIANCE Repair; ·
repair of all laundry equipment, refrigeration equip·
men! and house wiring; call
614-992-6050.
ll ·24·30tp

0

'

~fNifA~~~~JiPs"J-1~ttff.

OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
l0-&lt;1-ttc

PAPER Hanging and painting;
Arthur Musser, phone 742·
5223.
12-12-:JOtp
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-ttc

WEST

EAST

• J73
+AK3

.873
.K98
+852

... 743

41Q852

J~mes

Jacoby

$2895

4-door, h:J :call owner, low mileage c~r . beige •finish wi1h
brown vinyl top, vinyl in1erior, factory air, 350-engine,
power steering ·&amp; brakes, D.x. bumpers, wh . covers, like
new w-w tires, radio &amp; other fine accessories. A sharp car

- -----

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·

Po• .,,,.
Motor Co.

.guards, radio &amp; r~ar speaker, wh'lte-wall tires . Nice and

---~--,-

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks. ditching service; top soli, fill
dir.t, limestone; B&amp;K Excavating. Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr, Jr.
9·1-tfc

Pnmerov

. 1972 CHEV-ROLET CAPRICE
um
4-~oor, new car tl11e &amp; balance of warranty, covert color
With blk. vinyl roof, ti.rlled glass, factory air, front &amp; rear

Johnson and SQn, Inc.

--~'"'--..,.~

•,1 TON Chevr olet truck parts 61
later . Tra nsmission

3

speed, radiator s. heater. rea r
e n~s. 6 whole wheels. Wind ·

:.O t~ U ·Io~ ... '·~nt E\ •J l

HI ! ••-tHIS 'IS e'.£91;,
W\\',TCJW l
CO FOP 'r:\ ?

shields and glass . C. U.

led the three of hearts.
Waldy rose with dummy's ace; led the king of
clubs; continued with the
jack and Jet it ride after East
played low. It beld and
Waldy claimed the rest of
the trizks and the rubber.
"How did you figure that
one out?" asked West. "You
risked a two-trick set in the
event that 1 held the oueen
of clubs. A simple heart
finesse or a lead of a club
to rour king would have restrtcted your loss to one
trick and still given you a
satisfactory play wouldn't

- - - - - - 30 1-6

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

i'OMEROY, OHIO

TIMBER SPLITTERS
Wednesday, Dec. 20, bowling
results are as follows :

Last Wednesday night's
aclion ended the first half
season with Fren ch City
Mobile Homes cOming out on

top with a. 2 point margin over
runnerup Larry's Wayside . F.
C. led by J. Yankuns won 6

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH

1964 CHEVROLET Convertible 1.72 ACRE lot ; phone 742-3656.
Impala, 3 speed; 5195. 16
12-24-2fp
gauge 3 shot boll action
Mossburg , adjustable choke, H &amp; N DAY old or started
$30; 670-15 mud &amp;snow lire on
Leghorn pullets. Both floor
Ford or Dodge wheel, $5;
or cage grown available.
Raymond Pierce, 949-2374.
housing
&amp;
Poultry
12,21-31c
automa1ion. Modern Poultry,
399 W. Main, Pomeroy, 992ONE NEW 031. Stlhl chain saw, 2164.
Si90. Phone 742·5322, N. E.
12·24-ltc

.Vanaman.
!.itO i . :·. · _,
. , , 12; 24·Jfc , COAL,
C...u.,,u "L '-'u , -1
1 Salt
01

,._
· ~""t"' Amen.~.!!\ p,1erep'fSdlo

L.ir;n.estone,

Excelsior

Works, E. Main &lt;t.1
1 ''f!J6Yn'~ro9 . Phort~ ' W2 ·3~Vi~'r'.
' I comblnation, fiiM: FM 'I'~d/0, 4 "
'
.
. 4-12-tlc
speaker sound system, 4
speed automatic changer ;
balance 579 .31. Use our
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
Q- 1'o what royal house
12-19-6tc does Britain's Queen Eliza·
MODERN Walnut style stereo· beth belong?
A-Wi.ndsor.
radio, AM-FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4
Q-How many race horses
speed automat ic changer.
have
won what is knoum as
Balance $68.57. Use our
the
Triple
Crown?
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
A- Eight. The last was Ci·
12·19-7085.
12·19-6tc tatlon in 1948.

IS TAKING THE GUESS WORK
OUT OF BUYING A NEW CAR.
OUR INVOICE COST PRICE
:W.ILL BE.O.N THE WlN:DOW . ".
NEXT TO THE RETAIL
STICKER PRICE.
NO GUESS WORK FOR YOU
THE CUSTOMER. JUST LOOK
AT THE COST PRICE AND
MAKE US AN.OFFER.

70 Chev. Impala
4 Dr. sedan, radio, auto. trans., p. steering , p.

brakes. fac. air cond .• red metallic finish with
blk. interior. blk . vinyl roof, w-s -w tires. In
excellent cond.

EXAMPLE:
1973 CHRYSLER 4 DR. H.T.

•2095

· WOOD MOTOR SALES
Eastern Ave. -

Gallipolis, 0.

STICKER PRICE $5,239.25
FACTORY INVOICE PRICE OR OUR
COST $4,080.53.

Gallipolis
Chrysler-Plymouth
.
.

1639

ON THIS BIG

YEAR END CLEARANCE!
THIS INCLUDES ALL

NEW OR USED CARS
NOW IN STOCK

I.

Pus
Pus
4N.T.
Pus
Posa
?
You, South, hold:
.AQI87S +A3Z ... KQ7
What do you do now?
A-Bid olx beuta. You don't
1lid .......... lii1It. )'011 Inte
olx wlle11 your ,.n- · . - - ........ dial , ....
oide hohll Ill.. .....

w•

TODAY'S Ql1D110N

Your porlner """ club.
What do you 1-ICI wtth thla
same hand!

White

French

piece Iiving room suite ; 3

dinette sets; 3 coil spring s;
dresser ; chest of drawers; 'l
r ocker s; end table .

Rice's
' NEW" &amp; USEO FURNITURE
854 Second, 446-9523

WATKINS Producls Chr istmas
Gill Selections. Phone 446·
4761.
26i-tf

Jarrell's 235-642 - 6 points,
McKnight &amp; Davies Hdwr. and
P. Cl ifford 's 196-531 - 2 pol nls.
Falls Cily and R. Mitchell's
lU/·605-4 pis., Moose Lodge
. and R. Greer's 242·587 - 4
polnls.
Ashland Oil and P. Alderlgl's
221-575 -

4 point s, Marchi's

Carry Out and G. Marchi 's 190548 - 4 points.
Slandings'
Team
w. L.
French City
Mobil e Homes
94 3~
Larry's Wayside
92 36
Falls City
80 48
•Tawney's Studio
71 Si
Moose Lodge
12 56
Farmer's Hdwr .
66 62
Dock Inn
63 65
Ashland Oil
56 12
Marchi's Carry Out
52 76
Mc Kn l~ht - Davies
46 82
Fosler s Slore
44 84
City Ice &amp;Fuel
26 102

MONDAY BUSINESS
Monday, Dec. i8, bowling

points.

The b!ddllllf hos been:
West North
loot
Soudo
141

len.

PIECE

Prov incial bedroom suite only
2112 years old ; 4 piece sec·
li enal liv ing room sv it e; 2

as foll ows :

Gallo Wine and L. Angell 's
20S.S96 - 6 poin ts, Hart's Used
Cars and D. Duncan 2i5-612- 2

(NEWSPAPil (NTIOPOIIE ASSN .)

•z

Ave.

•

results are

"Yes," said Waldy. "But
this was the on!~ play ·that
would work."

s•••

.

USED FURNITURE

for Sale

it?"

'

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE fiOMES
1966 Shultz 12xso
19!8 Elcona 12 x 50
1968 Elcona 12 x 60
1973 Peerless 12 x 60
i960 Whilney 10 x 46
poin1s tram Foster 's Stor e and 1973 Holly Carl i2 x 60
1968 Roycroft 12 x 50
M. Canaday's 196·51 7.
i966
Schult 12 x 50
Larry' s Way side and C.
i966
Schult 12 x 50
Queen's 234·598 - 8 points,
i968
Elcona 12 x 50
Dock Inn and T. Roettker's 219i960 Whitney 10 x 46
613 - o points.
rawney' s Studio and T. 1969 Statesman 12 x 60
1973 Peerless 12 x 60
Rose's 576and K. White 's 576 8 points. City Ice &amp; Fuel and C. 1973 Kingswood 12 x. 60
1967 Topper 12 x 60
Perry 's 187-493 - 0 points.
Farmer's Hdwr . and M. 1969 Atlantic 12 x 60
1973 Holl ey Park 12 x 65
1971 Sylvan i2 x 60
1970 Hallma·rk 12 x 60
1970 Holley Park 12 x 60
1967 Town 8. Country 12 x 60
1965 Richardson 12 x 55
1962 Great Lakes 10 x 55
1961 Raycraft 10 x 46
1960 New Moon 10 x 50
1954 Castle 8 x 27
B&amp;S MOB'LE HOMES
Second &amp; Viand St.
Pl. Pleasant
I Next to Heck's I
292-tf

.J/ere's hoping that. all o(you
whose patronage we value so highly enjoy
the Christmas season to the fu'llest.

-

Real Estate For Sale

ClairVoyant About Queens

In !lie old days, Waldemar
von Zedtwitz of New ' York
was supposed to be almost
...-1--1--1--+~ clairvoyant when It came to
the problem of locating a
:..-1-+--t missmg queen . It appears
that he still possesses that
power as may be seen from
his success In making three
no-trump In a recent rubber
m-1 bridge game at the Caven.
dish Club.
After ducking the first
spade Waldy hail to win the
1-H continuation. He led . dummy's jack of diamonds and
1--+--1-~ overtook . with his queen.
West could not afford to duck
-1-+--+~ because of the heart suit so
West won and set up his la8t
-+--+--11--+--1
spade.
The nine of diamonds waa
overtaken by tbe 10 and
again West was lh. He
ca&amp;lled his last spade. After
seeing a dtta of club&amp; dll·
nrd frorn his partner West

legally l12-lowd one
49- Pat,ugew ay
113- A l late
SO-Swilt
. 11£-Benlan tu mor
S4-Artlfl ela l
't 18-Stalk
. channel s
119-Crippled
55- Had re cl ined
122-Pawl
56--Thin sca le
124- Hurrles.
59 - Spoors
125-Roman
60--Cut
s tatesman
61 - E ~te l~m a t l on
126--Wina·foote d
63-Unasplr•ted
128-Sii'IQ:inl voice
66-Symbol for tin 130--..fncountered
67-Symbol for Iron 131 - Endurtl
68--~akes pleasant U 2-Fraarant
olaor•tfn
10-Part of l !ahllne 13 5-Troplcal· lrult
(pl.l
131-Qulclo: stroke

Of
QUAliTY

WIN AT BRIDOE

By Oswald &amp;

a will

representative.

C. B. RADIOS, antennas •. also
pollee scanners; Dalley's
Radio Sh!'P, Box 2i B, Long
Bottom, Ohio.
·
12-2Hic

.QJ!06

- - - - - --

Shop . 245·5535.

·-

2 SIGNS

estimates , phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.

HENRY E. CLELAND
and ASSOCIATES
Office 992-2259
If no answer 992-2561 or 985420,.

.AK2
.AQ!062
+J9

GMAC Financing Available

L

marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . A. Jacob, sales

2 STORY HOME. full basement,
' bath &amp; If,, extra lot and attached garage; available
now; may be h~d with basic
furniture; near Pomeroy
Elementary School; phone
992-7384 or 992·7133.
12-24-6tc

23

$3,892
SADDLE. bridle, blanket and _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _30 l ·6
53.579
breal collar. I mon th old. Ph. 1970 DUSTER 340. 1966 Ford
$3,165
446-9700.
Gal axie Ph . 446-0668.
51,799
301 ~
~14
sleeps 5,

Pl. Pl easanl behing Red
Car pet Inn. Ph. 675-5384.
•
2B9·tf st:T

A VERY

" You ' ll Like 0·•" Quality Way of Doing 'Business"

doors and windows, carports,

kitchen, cellar, garage, 2
glassed
sunporches .
$12,800.00.
\
FROM USTDYOU
A GREAT BIG
HAPPY NEW YEARS

NORm(D)

m .s

wit h cooverter , same high
di scount on fold downs, sorn e
used units . Camp Con ley
Starc ra ft Sa les , Route 62 N. of

and

~n Eves. Til 6-Til S P.M. Sat.

SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-tfc

Real Estate For Sale

992 -SJ4l _

~omeroy

5-12-tfc
~--c-----

radio, one

011erchandiser wilh large sell· ONLy ONCE IN A LIFETIME
dosing s lidi ng door s, 3 door · will you . be b\Jying a diamond
white enamel, 4 monfhS- old,
engagement ring . At this
675 1265.
important time, your key to a

KARRcadillac
&amp; VAN
ZANDT
· Oldsmobile

.SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
992-2174

Owner &amp; Operator.

Opening lead-• Q

4.~ Provu

86-Mist•ke,
8~-cor•l lst,nd
89- S•rvtr

Teaford, Sr.

.

/J:.M-FM

'3800

largest
Bulldozer Rlidlator to the
Small~st Heater Core.
Nothan Biggs ·
.RadiJtor Specialist_.

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

REASONABLE rates. Ph .. 4464782, Gallipolis, John Russell.

24' 7" WS $4,892 lor
22' 7'" WS $4,475. lor
10' 7" WS ~3, 9 5 4 lor
18' 7" WS $3,499 for
SELF ·CDNTAiN ED

.

CARROLL NORRI.S DODGE.

s..l$1 "'JAt:Ort MOIIfiH ...,.
111: "Wilt oi IMtt." (c/o d l t -

.

Slewarl 's Hd wr . and C.
Queon's 21 4-629 - 6 poi nts.
Gallipol is Parts Whse. and W.
Denney's 213-542 - 2 poinls.
Johnson's Market and R.
Fer~u so n 's 206-567- 6 pts .,
O'Dell Lumber and T. Riese r's
226-S8i - 2 poinls.
Blue Fountain Molel and K.
While's 209-593 - 6 points.
Moose Lodge and E. Thomas'
201 -554 - 2 poinls.
Chris Craft and H. Wh ile's
194·526 - 6 polnls, Firestone
apd J. Bailey's 515 and B.
Radel ill's 515 - 2 poinls.
C. &amp; P. Telephone and B.
Cox's 20i-Si6 - 6 poinls, The
Feds and 8. Hall's 185-529 - 2
polnls.
Corbin &amp; Snyder and J.
Lane's 190-580 - 4 poi nls,
Jenkins's Concrele and R.
Graham 's 225-533 - 4 poin ls.
Slandings:
T•am
W. L.
Gallo Wine
102 18
Stewarl's Hdwr.
84 36
Harl's Used Cars
74 46
0' Dell Lumber
68 52
Moose Lodge
68 52
Corbin &amp; Snyder
64 56
Blue Founlain
62 58
Firestone
56 64
54 66
Johnson's Mkt.
Chris Crall
54 66
Gallipoli s Parts
52 68
C. &amp; P. Telephone
52 68
Feds
30 80
Jenkins Concrete
20 100

.,
f'm·f's1uJH is wliaL · !Jfm
11 ~erJ whe1l the par t y be·
lmul 111m l(t'/IS. j rn•f bt•(rll'('
tldJ·i·;:J as ,. ., ,,,,. uonr lr'IJ/.

,.,.,,, ~.0. . . . . . . Cllr
!tofloo, N. Y..t. H.'t. 'litlt.

'.
,)

I

___

73 1f? in H. full. view displa y

'57 CHEVY, good condition. Call
446·3592 or 446-9777,

Chri s1mas Sate

• No Payments Until After Jan. 1, 1973

-- - -SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

Virgil B.

-----

Miller , Rio Grande Ba rber

fURNITURE

105- Mo\.ln ta lns ol

109- Swaetheart

77- 0utch tvwn
78-G ra ln

Pomeroy. H~me &amp;Auto

.954 .
.54
+QIOSH
... A96
Both vulnerable
North Eut South
I.
Pus IN.T.
Pass 3N.T. Pass Pass

98-lnqu lres.
99- Part of foot
(pl .)
100-Fiaure s. of

ll l - Ran~:a

7 5- F~ol i cs

and.

SOUTH (D)

n ltr~te
9~ ha l dnn elty

47- lnuet

lribes.men
72-Atrlform
fluid
13--VIew

Phone 992-2Q94

606 E. Main/ Pomeroy, 0 .

,owner new Caqillac trade.

LAYAWAY FOR .XMAS
Open to 7; closed Mondays

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Open8Tit5
Monday,ihru Saturday

Cl1mate Control air conditioning ,

992-2094

-~UARANTEED­

YOURS"

SUver·metalllc finish, blue interior, full power equipment,

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E. Main

~-~...,.:....

Valley View Greenhousepric es ran~e fr om S'3.1S .
S6.75. 'h mite E. ol Por ter.
Phon e-· 3$8-Slbo.

"WISH YOU AND

70 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

bi scouot pr'iced.

Phone 992-2511
or 992-3918

4~KJIO

90-Neaat tve
prefix
91 - cyprlnolclflsh
94- Potanl um

42- Whlp
44- Weary

11- lndonesian

On Most American cars

location, close to school and

Perry Como special and decided Joey 's a
BY JACK O'BRIAN
modern star-version of the kids who made it big
TAKE IT OFF AND RAKE IT IN
from the chorus in his generation (such as Joan
NEW YORK (KFS ) - There 's gold in them
Blondell, Ruby Keeler etc.) ... Midtown apartthar G-strings: stripper Rose Ia 1 Rose (not
ment
houses are hiring guards - to chase
nearly so famous as Gypsy Rose Lee, Margie
Hart, Ann Corio, Hinda Wasau etco) left $730,000 hookers soliciting in front. Such as 16~ W. 56th
when she died recently; $400,000 in cash! ... St. ... Marta 's of Bergen Street? It's on W. 49th
Gypsy left more than a million when she St. .. . More New Year's Eve: Peter's Backyard
on W. 10tnSt., $25for all the champagne you can
floW!ced off to the big Minsky 's in the sky.
Jack Paar's telecomehack pact with ABC- swallow, dinnern funny hats ek
ABC-TV Eyewitness News team's
TV .included his insistence Dick cavett should
togetherness isn't all on camera : they're
be retained. Paar doesn't admire Johnny
convening
next week at the Press Box - with
Carson's style much ... Ladybird Johnson's
Tex Antoine · as entertainment chairman
memories of George Hamilton's Lynda Bird
period are warm: "Maybe every girl needs a promising NOT to have Howard Cosell as Santa
.. . Mrs, &amp;rnard Gimbel celebrated her BOth
George Hamilton in her life. At least he made
Lynda realize she could be beautiful" ... Lon- birthday at her Greenwich estate and made the
don's ' In-hotel, the Dorchester, wouldn't let juniors happy - each place card envel91&gt;e
J
~
'
'
contained 80 one-buck~ bills; grand ·old lady'.r •
Geraldine Chaplin and her (can6ldly) liVe-in
Carol Channing's upcoming "Lorelei"
beau check in double ... 'Pierre Galante's book '
musical
has the Bdwy chorus kids beaming
about Coco Chane! will state the old fashioo
maven took a Nazi as a WW II occupation-lover. hopefully: comes in with a nine-month
guarantee ; it's a worked-over "Gents Prefer
Shorl of fuel, eh?
The Long Island R. R. strike seems sure to Towheads" ... Stiller and Meara's hysterically
last past · Yule : Jerry Keebler 's organ was funny new comedy album, "Laugh When You
Like," contains an uproarious satirical swat
mov~d into Penn Station for its annual
Christma music to holiday throngs. The other entitled " Rhoda Blabbit" reedling Rona
day a crew removed it ... Magda Gabor's plush Barrett's TV inanities. Anna Meara figured
Southampton mansion burned to the expensive they'd never meet - and so they are booked to
ground· ... It was politics-plus at "21": Sen. co-star with the H'wood columnist on Alan
George McGuff, Sen. Jake Javits and ex-Mayor ·King's year-end special. They hope she 'II never
Bob Wagner ... Eve Arden's touring. in "But- hear the album. Not a chance. It's a cinch for
terflies Are Free. " Great casting : at New best-seller status.
Publishers Row can't figure Sen. Tom
Jersey's Meadowbrook early in '73.
How's this for versatility : Richard Hanser, Eagleton's indecision about writing a book - he
one of the finest writers aroWld in books or' TV has a dozen offers - about his travails and
documentaries (Victory at Sea , The Coming of traumas . One bookman figures he is waiting for
Christ etc. ) ranges from his last fascinating the best-timed political moment .. . Rex
tome about Hitler :_ to his new one about J esus. Harrison's writing his memoirs : 44 years acThe Westchester (Mamaroneck ) writer's ting, five wives, dozens of swinging romances,
"What Manner of Man Is This" has advance etc . ... The always edgy French \empers are
raves which makes Simon &amp; Schuster hopping mqre abrasive : annual TV-tax per-set climbed
happy ... Virginia de Luce, star of "New Faces to $26 from $14. Now they know how we feel
of 1952," changed her name to Blue Dove and is about over-charging .. . Bill's Gay 90s New
sparking an American Indian theatrical project Year's Eve: $11 minimum, dinner alone $9 to
.. . Hamilton Morge , CBS-TV cameraman for 20 $12.5{), $6 bar minimum, floor , show stars
years who sued CBS for $15 million claiming Dorothy Arms and The Revelers upstairs,
"The Beverly Hillbillies" was his concept and oldtime vaudeville on the first floor ... Trlcia
script, won a new trial in his se.emingly im- Nixon and hubby Eddie Cox are off to Russia for
possible quest. Louis Nizer is his new lawyer. Yuletide. Seems a contrast in terms, Moscow
Jimmy Gagney saw Joey Heatherton on the and Chdstmas.

21- Permlsslon

Clean &amp; guaranteed.
•
NEW F URNI:TUR E
Sola Beds &amp; Recl iners.

Otase Hdwe. Co.

trucks and low-boy for hire.

house, 3 bedrooms, excellent

~~

16--Mature

afso

READY -MIX
CONCRETE
Real Estate For Sale
delivered
rfght
to your
Mobile Homes For Sale
Phone 992-2602.
project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
HOUSE
in
Long
Bottom,
phone
12-2i-2otp
3 BEDROOM lra iler, partially
estimates, Phone 992-3284.
985-3529.
furni shed, some underpinning - - - - - - -- - Goegleln Ready -Mix Co. ,
and steps; ph.one 742-4833.
HOUSE FOR SA~E . 114 Brick
Middlep&lt;H:t. Ohio.
12-22-61c Slreet. Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
6·30-tfc
CASH paid for all makes and

17-Note ol sca lt

Estimates. ·We

•650o

t,J sed furniture, appllances.

cabinets in kitchen, close to
radio stati on in Bradbury,

WMP0/1390

15- Woollr

Free

condttfomng, S new whitewall fires.

Rt. 1 "at caution light''
TUPPERS PLAINS

haul fill dirt, top $Oil. Dump

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

plus g1gant1c.

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

done by hot:r or contract.

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
after 1 p.m. or phon&amp; 992·
5232.

&lt;-- - - - ---'--

reduction on all dogs . All A.K·
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
1220 washington Blvd.
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
12-13-tfc

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1972
60-Nerrow
openln1
61-Pos.. a.."

ca rpeted. $3,100 ; phone 985424.8.
12-22-61p

Phone 742·3812. 'display of mobile homes .
.
12·i4·i21c always available at ...

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS

. conditioner . like new, fully

AKC Toy Poodl es, wormed and 'complete mQbil e . ha~e;

puppies, 4 wee ks old ; ca ll9925072.

We talk to you
like a person.

- - -- -- -

li·21 ·JIC

Pets For Sale

REGI ST ERED Ir is h Setter

healthful , prosperous and Help Wanted
Happy New Year. Edward WANTED, male Social Secur ily
IBuck) and Mary Schaefer.
or Old Age pensi oner to help
12.24-ltc
move male from bed to Cha ir .
Contact /Ws. Ed J. Smith,
WE WISH to express our most
phone 992-2853.
heartfelt thanks to everyone
12·21-3tc
whoso generously gave blood,
'
6ffered to give blood and sent
cards and gifts to Isabel PLUMBING and Healing man,
experienced ; If not ex during her illness and con ·
Reflenced and honesl, do not
· linemen! to the Holzer
.
apply
I phone 992-2511 or 992·
Medical Center. Your many
3918.
kindnesses will never be
12-6-tfc
~ ·forgotten: l'he Harold ~ar ­

Notice

585. C~ ll Ravenswood 273-9521
or 273-9893.
ll -30-tf c

PARKVIEW Kennels going out

ba sement , automati c heat,
Lincoln Height s; phone 742·

5092.

machine. Li ke new in walnut
cabinet. Makes design stitches, Iig-zags, button holes,
blind hems. overcasts, etc.

4-i2·ffc

HOU SE . 4 rooms and ba th. full

992-2448

' means · to wish each and
everyone a very Merry '
Christmas and a peaceful,

nahan Family .,

phone 992-251 1.
.:.......
12·5-lfc

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

to our families , many friends

i~ ;

FURN ISHED 2 bedroom
aparl men t, adul ts only ,
Midd lepor t ; phone 992-3874.
.J2·12·1fc

Hot Water Healers
Plumbing
Electrica I Work

WE WISH to extend our thanks

__

___
lived

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS

Card of Thanks
atten1iveness ~

••HEit"

on ly; phone 992-5592.

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

$1 .50 for 50 worlj minimu m.

· Each add itibna l word 2C.
BLIND ADS

- - - -- 3 ROOM f urnished house, adults SI·NG E R Automat ic sewin g

Da~k grey finish with red lealh; r Int.•.full pow~r
equ,pment, AM-FM stereo, Climate Conlrol air

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

Concrete Work
Remodeling

MOTORS, I·NC.

72 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

For Sale

CHRISTMAS Trees - Nor way 1966 RAMB LER, American 4 ANTIQUE f)llmp organ, ali
door station wagon, cheap.
ong•nal e)(cept new bellows.
spruce, white Pine, Scotch
446-3408 titter 5 p.m .
Over 80 vears old. MadP. bv
pin e,
red
ceda r
and,
Tayl or and Fraley Organ Co.,
Evergreen pine, 41o 12 ft . tall
. 301 ·3
Worces ter, Mass. One bellows
on lot beside Heck' s in Pt.
52 CU. FT. reach in display
typo .
Pho ne
992·3904,
Pl easant.
Syr acuse, 0 .
290·10 cooler, 731!4 in. W. x 32 IJ4 iri 0 x

$TARCRAFT

SPENO TIME
SAVE ~·s

For Sale

For Sale

CfiRISTMAS SALE
POINSETTIAS

SMITH NELSON

Now Thru Dec. 31'

.

consecut ive inse rtion s.
18 cents per wo rd s ix con -

WE .AT

ON ANY

For Sale
Mobile Homes For Sale
SHOTGU N MATC H, Sunday.
TWO
BE
DROOM
mobile
home
Dec . 24lh. 12 noon, Side Hill
DUE TO lay·olf, 8 track slereo NEED ANOTHER BEDROOM,
5 P .M , Oay 'Before Pub li c~t ti on
on Old Rl. 33, adulls onl y;
MQnday Deadlin e 9 a .m .
Gun Club; fac tory choke 9uns
In w al nu1 co nso le ; pay
OR FAMILY ROOM
phone 992-6294 or 992-6385 balance ol 598.80 or pay 58 per DEN
Cancellation - f=orr e~ t ion s
onl y ; no alcoholic beverages
FOR
YOUR
MOBILE
·
atler 6 p.m.
Will be accepted until9 a.m . lor
al lowed ; assor ted rnea ts ; soff
month ; phone 9'12-5331.
HOME?
EASILY
DONE
Day of Publica tion
.
12-24-IOtc
. ' 12-12-tfc WITH A VEMCO ADD-A·
drinks will be sold ; . fr ee
· REGULATIONS
1=offee : di r ectiMs to·match ROOM .. SEE IT AT : .
The Publisher r eser ve s ttl e
FUR NISHE D apa'rt menl. 3 -'------'-~-31 z mi les NOrth of Rutland to
JUST
taken
In
delu
xe
Zig.
Zag
·
YOUNG'S MOBILE fiOME
r ight to edit or r eiect a n y ads
rooms and b~ th , modern ;
Fo r es t Ac res Pdrk, fake
sewing
mac
hine.
Thi
s
SAL.
ES, ST. · RTE . 7 &amp; 35 I
deemed
ob j er:tl onaL
Th e
· phone 992-2623.
publisher will not be responsi ble
gravel road to fi(S ! road left
ma
chine
dar
ns.
em·
(
BE
L 0 W S I LV E R
12·17-tfc
for more than one incorrect
t 2 m ile; there w i ll be signs
br6iderles. makes bu l· MEMORIAL
BRDG . l.
insert ion .
from par k to match : not
lonholes. al l wilhout al - GALLIPOLIS.
RATES
TRAILER spaces; extra large lac hmenls; pay balance of
12-lHic Dozer &amp; End loader work,
respons ible for accidents.
Fpr Want Ad Service
lots. $25 a month , Velma
538.50 or pay $6 per month ; -- - - -- -- ponds. basement, land12-21 ·31c
5 cents per Wor d one inser tion
Zuspan , Mason, W. Va .
phone 992-5331.
scaping. We have 2 size · ,
Minimum Cha rge 75c
11.2qot p
12-il-tfc 1970 · MOBILE Home, a ir- dOzers, 2 size loaders. Work
t7 cents per word thr ee
. NFORMATION
DEADLINES

For Sale

_...,.....,..,...._..,..,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _l

·r-- ..,.--

/1e's. from

. thl! wrOnQ
f!L de

or the

ract\6 -

,

I

~~

success ful pur chase Is your

jeweler . Let us help you at
Tawney's Jewelers . .

- -- - --

302-2

�'

. 00 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, SWlday, Dec. 24, 1972

21-The SUndayTimes-Sentinei,SUnday, Dec. 24, 1972

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
NOTICE

WANT- ADS

10% Discount

For Rent

·usED CAR

Business Services
PWMBING
HEATING

_EARTH MOVING

'

se-cutive inSer tions.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads pa id within 10 da.ys,
CARD OF T!IANKS
&amp; O~ITUARV
·

Additional 25c Ch arg e per
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOURS
8: 30a .m. to 5 : 00p . m . Daily ,
8 : 30

a .m. to

Saturday.

12 :00

i2-S-Ifc

- -- - TWO new mobile homes, never

No on

and good ·neighbors for their

kihdness ,

lhoughffulness. the lovely
flOwers, good food, the useful
gifts, beautiful cards and
special prayers. we lake this

unf urnis hed

Phone 992-5434.

apa d ments .

- - -- -.

i2·22 ·61p

Pomeroy. 0 .

EXPERIENCES
12-24-ltp WANTED:
SPECIALTY SALESMAN TO
ESTABLISH • NEW AC .
In Memory
COUNTS. GUARANTEED
WEEKLY DRAW AGAINS;
I"! MEMORY of Charles and COMMISSIONS.
One-call
~anie Snider: Dearest Mom
cl0$.er, such as man who ha"s
and Dad, this is the first year
successfully sold land, inwithout both of you. Dad has
surance, mutual funds, hom e
been gone lot quite awhile;
improvements,
franchises .
oh, but still the wonderful
vending.
freeze~:
plans.
memories we keep of him;
education,
etc
.
Can
have
and only last year Mom went
bright
future
with
nationally
to , loin him. Only one who
advertised &lt;;Ompany. Ex ·
knOINs the hurt knows how
tremely hig~ earnings
much we loved you and how
potential
. Our top producers
much we miss you at Christ·
earn
commissions
of 525,000
mas lime and all through the
to $50,000 per year. lflou can
ear. Sadly missed by your
travel extensively an have a
r.ovtng children.
car , we'll prove it to you .
good
12-24-llp
.
.
For additional informatioh
and personal interview, call

Mr. Porter. toll free at (8001
621-1006. (800) 621 -8182. (800)
621-7501 .
12·24·1fp

INTERNATIONAL Songwriters
Club; recording, publishing,
free membership; write
i.S.C., Rt. 1, Box 210, Mid· FOR THE poslllon of half. time
dteport, Ohio 45760.
4-H Program Assistant .
12·22-6tc
,
Contact fhe County Extension
Office In the basement of the
I WILL NOT be responsll&gt;le for
COIIMjl ~om.-. Phone 992-3895
any debts contracted by
tor details. The Cooperative
anyone other !han myself.
Extension Service Is an Equal
Signed: Basil L Hayne 0, Rt ..
Opportunity Employer.
1. M'ddleport, Ohio.
Training beyond high school
12·22-31p
is desired but not required.
Applicant must have a car
HAYMAN'S Auction - a good
ava ilable.
place to go each Frlday
12· 24- 31~
evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west of WE'LL SEND
BRIGHT,
Rock Springs Fairground.
YOUNG MEN TO SCHOOL
10-10-ffc
FOR RADAR JOBS IN
EUROPE . II you'd like to live
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS.
and work in Europe , there' s
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
an exciting job walling for
PHONE HELEN JANE
ou with tod~y·s Army. You'll
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT,
r.
earn to Gupervise and crn1rol
OH 10 992·5113.
ground surveillance radar
12-3·ffc
units. With full pay wh ile
you're
in school. And lots ot
THERE will be no Shooting
other
benefits.
Like 30 days
Match atthe Racine Gun Club
aid
vacation
a
year
. If you' re
this weekend due to Christ.
ooking
for
this
kind of
mas Holldavs.

r.

challenge and exc itement,

Today's Army wants to join
you. For complete details call
collect SS G. Clark 593-3022.
12·20-6tc
OLD Furn iture, oak tables ,
organs, dishes, clocks . brass
beds, or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oll io. Call 992-6271.
.
6-28-lfc

Auto Sales
i967 FUR Y Ill , 4 door, 383
engine, good condi tion , S800;

Freddie Thabet, Mason, w.
Va .; phone 773-565i .
12-1 5-tt c

~OI.lfl'JOS

house broken. Wil l hold for
Chrl stm ~s .

of

business .

!-Fruit

124- Heavanly body
12$--Cries Hkt crow

6-Confenton

62-Part of fl ower

div:slo rt
127-Kits
129- Silly smile
131-Tibetan priest
132- L•mb' s pen

ll-Perhin in&amp; to

the stars

64- French article

65- Sun 1od

18-AIIude

66-lanore

19-o-Body of water
20--Aarlcultu(e
21-climblnl
plants
.
23-River in Siberia

24-Anl•r

67- F..JIIs short
69-Coins
71- Mohammedan
commander
H - Enltven
74- Tidlns:s

26--Ratlonal
27-Member Of
Parll1mtnt
(abbr.)
29- Bury
30-Burden
31-Cry of

76-Repatt
79-Caudal
appendaij:n
81 - Fon dle
82- Siender finial
84-Destitute
85-Astant

Bacc::hanats
32-Wine cup

87-Chalr

33--Rutt.ltn
vlll•l•
complement
35-Athlet+c- 1roup
36-Crawls

95-Piay strlnJed
lnstrul'fiant
97- Put on ca lf

31--Adlust
4CJ-oewn pddest
41-fqQih baby
carlia1•
42--F.rm bulldlna

4.J:-Dine

4~rtllt's stand

46-A tontl"tllt

(sbbr,)
47-Comely
41--Writh'l
lmplemenla

4t-MoWnc

51-Unit of l(llian

134- Spread for

drying

136-Abound
137- 0oom
13 8- Hard sUic:a
139 -~ te a m s hip

(abbr.)
140- Roekllfh
1• 1-Southwestern
Indian
142-Too
143- lnd/an te nt
144 ~St rnllled

146----f'lng:er
148-Mortifl caticn
149- F'In al

150-cea,es

mound
98-Man's
nlckn11me
99-Eldttt
101-Wrlt1tn list
J03-Paddlt
104-Propllet

1!1 1- Havlni'
offensive stnel l

DOWN
t ~ Resps

105-ltem of
proj:ltrty

10$-Nothlna
110--completely
112-bltt
113-Kind .
U4-Symbol for

111non

currency
12-A stat. (abbr.l

115-Fishlnr duel(

5~trt

117-Royal

of t•c•

animals

92-Confederate

aeneral
93-Strlct

&amp;f-(:ollet• s.~ef)' 111--&lt;&gt;ce.ns
(colfoq.)
119-Cuts
55-Matter-of·f.tct · 120-Conjunction
17-Ho.. nt,old Pl1 121-Menured
III-Otlemlcat
duretidn of
compoUnd
lU-Soa~~;

land

name
133-Enclosure for

90-SitJqlahneu

34-Shlp's

1 2~0anllh

1
.f;

2;:_Renovate
3-A1 a distance
4- Footllke part
5-T•utonic dthy
6-c l'!oice part
7-Skin
8--Gi rl 's name

9-coneae dearee
(abbr.)
tO-Impelled
11 - Most

precipi tous
12-Nol e of •eale

13-l ohe nrrln
heroi ne
14 - South

American
an imal

· Air Conditioners
; Awnings
··Underpinning
servi ce

""T"

Big

price

12-22·3tc

ON YOUR DIAL

J

Real Estate For Sale
8 ROOM house and bath. nice
large lol . natural gas. built-in

22-Hostile ra ldt
23- cleyer urth
25-Fh;h sus
27-S ubstan ce
28-Bithop
30-Shalltspurlan
ki ng.
31-11 mls teken

33- Meiody
35- Journey
36-Jut:on

37- Satiatu
39- Hindu Cymba ls
41-Co uple

m odel s of m obile homes.

city ; contact ·Lou Osborne ,or

Phone area code 614-423-9531.
·
4-13-tfc

call 992-5898.

s peech
102- Boy
allendants
104- Sco rch

ll -26·tfc

c.

Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohlo45769
OVER RIVER LANO
3.33 ACRES - Brand new
i972 Fleetwood, 3 bedroom
mobile

home .

Screened

patio, drilled well. All level

BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
RacinJ&gt;, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-ftc

-CARPENTRY,
- - -repair,
--

work
additions, kitchen cabinets
and paneling ; calf Guy
Nelgler. Racine, Ohio.
12-22·3!&lt;

with ·road to river. A .won-

derful place for
$21,500.00.
l1S ACRES ·
HUNT! NG LAND -

only
With

gas well, 6 room house, barn,
and several other buildings
in need of repair . We are

asking $20,000.00.
BUNGALOW
2 BEDROOMS - Nice bath,
large living and kitchen .

. CLELAND
REALTY

Next door to store on level

Pomeroy

lot. Only $4,500.00.
98 ACRES and
MOBILE HOME LOT With well and electric. The
rest is wild land, Jldeal' for
sell frig of plries . .-,'jjro~Jctng ·
gas well and minerals. Only
Si6.500.00.
ONE ACRE
T. P.
water,
electric
available. Some trees. Only
52500.00.
SYRACUSE
5 ROOMS - Bath. nice
kitchen, front and back
perches . Full basement and
large extra lot . Only
$10.600.00.
2 YEARS OLD
NEAR RACINE - 2nicesize
bedrooms

with

closets .

Utility room and large
modern ki1chen . Carport and
1;, acre .. Asking $14,000.00.

NEW LISTING
NEASE SETTLEMENT - 3
bedrooms, nice closets in
each, large modern kitchen

with bar. Utility room with
washer and dryer hookups.
Stove, and refrigerator included in sale. Now the price

is just $12,500.00.
HAVING SOLD A NUMBER
OF HOMES, WITH A VERY
SUCCESSFUL YEAR, WE
NOW .NEED SEVERAL
GOOD
PROPERTIES ,
PRICED RIGHT, FOR THE
NEW YEAR. WE WANT TO
THANK ALL OF YOU FOR
MAKING IT POSSI.BLE.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
992-3325

601

E.llllln

JUST RENOVATED
MIDDLEPORT - ~ story
frame, 2 bedrooms, dining
roqm, ' path;. ~6, f) ., flying
room, carpeted throughout, 2
car carport. $12,500.00.
LARGE COLONIAL
?OMEROY - RECENTLY
RENOVATED - The kif·
chen Is a house wife's dream,

EVERYTHING BUlL 1' IN,' 4
bedrooms, 2 balhs,. uliflty R.
carpeted. EXCELLENT
STREET. $17,500.00.
.85 ACRE
RACINE - Beautiful older
home, new kltch~n. 9 rooms.
5 bedrooms, p;, baths, full

basement, garaqe and other
buildings.
LARGE 2 STORY
MIDDLEPORT
5
bedrooms, 1112 baths, nice

Europe
106-l napect
107- Hevln&amp; made

138--Accomptlsh·
ment
14Q-klnlil
142-Tlme lOne by
143-Deflnlte

article
144- Prefi:t: down
145- Prinler's

80-Parcels of la nd
musu~
83-Roman road
147-Pronoun
148-Mu•lcal
cllrtctlon
(abbr.)

.·

For · free

3-2-tfc

clean. Retail $4860. Priced !o move.
i971 CHEVROLET BEL AIR

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
IBilll Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
4-25-ttc

ELNA and W~ite Sewing
Machines ... service on all
makes. Reasonable rates .
The Sewing Center, Mid·
dleport, Ohio. ..
ll-16-tfc

&amp; one you would like.
i965 DODGE CORONET
1565
HT Cpe., V-8 engine,. au1o m:. tic ·:rans., power steering .
bucket seats, white finish .
.

.Pomeroy Motor Co.

G &amp; E APPLIANCE Repair; ·
repair of all laundry equipment, refrigeration equip·
men! and house wiring; call
614-992-6050.
ll ·24·30tp

0

'

~fNifA~~~~JiPs"J-1~ttff.

OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
l0-&lt;1-ttc

PAPER Hanging and painting;
Arthur Musser, phone 742·
5223.
12-12-:JOtp
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-ttc

WEST

EAST

• J73
+AK3

.873
.K98
+852

... 743

41Q852

J~mes

Jacoby

$2895

4-door, h:J :call owner, low mileage c~r . beige •finish wi1h
brown vinyl top, vinyl in1erior, factory air, 350-engine,
power steering ·&amp; brakes, D.x. bumpers, wh . covers, like
new w-w tires, radio &amp; other fine accessories. A sharp car

- -----

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·

Po• .,,,.
Motor Co.

.guards, radio &amp; r~ar speaker, wh'lte-wall tires . Nice and

---~--,-

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks. ditching service; top soli, fill
dir.t, limestone; B&amp;K Excavating. Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr, Jr.
9·1-tfc

Pnmerov

. 1972 CHEV-ROLET CAPRICE
um
4-~oor, new car tl11e &amp; balance of warranty, covert color
With blk. vinyl roof, ti.rlled glass, factory air, front &amp; rear

Johnson and SQn, Inc.

--~'"'--..,.~

•,1 TON Chevr olet truck parts 61
later . Tra nsmission

3

speed, radiator s. heater. rea r
e n~s. 6 whole wheels. Wind ·

:.O t~ U ·Io~ ... '·~nt E\ •J l

HI ! ••-tHIS 'IS e'.£91;,
W\\',TCJW l
CO FOP 'r:\ ?

shields and glass . C. U.

led the three of hearts.
Waldy rose with dummy's ace; led the king of
clubs; continued with the
jack and Jet it ride after East
played low. It beld and
Waldy claimed the rest of
the trizks and the rubber.
"How did you figure that
one out?" asked West. "You
risked a two-trick set in the
event that 1 held the oueen
of clubs. A simple heart
finesse or a lead of a club
to rour king would have restrtcted your loss to one
trick and still given you a
satisfactory play wouldn't

- - - - - - 30 1-6

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

i'OMEROY, OHIO

TIMBER SPLITTERS
Wednesday, Dec. 20, bowling
results are as follows :

Last Wednesday night's
aclion ended the first half
season with Fren ch City
Mobile Homes cOming out on

top with a. 2 point margin over
runnerup Larry's Wayside . F.
C. led by J. Yankuns won 6

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH

1964 CHEVROLET Convertible 1.72 ACRE lot ; phone 742-3656.
Impala, 3 speed; 5195. 16
12-24-2fp
gauge 3 shot boll action
Mossburg , adjustable choke, H &amp; N DAY old or started
$30; 670-15 mud &amp;snow lire on
Leghorn pullets. Both floor
Ford or Dodge wheel, $5;
or cage grown available.
Raymond Pierce, 949-2374.
housing
&amp;
Poultry
12,21-31c
automa1ion. Modern Poultry,
399 W. Main, Pomeroy, 992ONE NEW 031. Stlhl chain saw, 2164.
Si90. Phone 742·5322, N. E.
12·24-ltc

.Vanaman.
!.itO i . :·. · _,
. , , 12; 24·Jfc , COAL,
C...u.,,u "L '-'u , -1
1 Salt
01

,._
· ~""t"' Amen.~.!!\ p,1erep'fSdlo

L.ir;n.estone,

Excelsior

Works, E. Main &lt;t.1
1 ''f!J6Yn'~ro9 . Phort~ ' W2 ·3~Vi~'r'.
' I comblnation, fiiM: FM 'I'~d/0, 4 "
'
.
. 4-12-tlc
speaker sound system, 4
speed automatic changer ;
balance 579 .31. Use our
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
Q- 1'o what royal house
12-19-6tc does Britain's Queen Eliza·
MODERN Walnut style stereo· beth belong?
A-Wi.ndsor.
radio, AM-FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4
Q-How many race horses
speed automat ic changer.
have
won what is knoum as
Balance $68.57. Use our
the
Triple
Crown?
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
A- Eight. The last was Ci·
12·19-7085.
12·19-6tc tatlon in 1948.

IS TAKING THE GUESS WORK
OUT OF BUYING A NEW CAR.
OUR INVOICE COST PRICE
:W.ILL BE.O.N THE WlN:DOW . ".
NEXT TO THE RETAIL
STICKER PRICE.
NO GUESS WORK FOR YOU
THE CUSTOMER. JUST LOOK
AT THE COST PRICE AND
MAKE US AN.OFFER.

70 Chev. Impala
4 Dr. sedan, radio, auto. trans., p. steering , p.

brakes. fac. air cond .• red metallic finish with
blk. interior. blk . vinyl roof, w-s -w tires. In
excellent cond.

EXAMPLE:
1973 CHRYSLER 4 DR. H.T.

•2095

· WOOD MOTOR SALES
Eastern Ave. -

Gallipolis, 0.

STICKER PRICE $5,239.25
FACTORY INVOICE PRICE OR OUR
COST $4,080.53.

Gallipolis
Chrysler-Plymouth
.
.

1639

ON THIS BIG

YEAR END CLEARANCE!
THIS INCLUDES ALL

NEW OR USED CARS
NOW IN STOCK

I.

Pus
Pus
4N.T.
Pus
Posa
?
You, South, hold:
.AQI87S +A3Z ... KQ7
What do you do now?
A-Bid olx beuta. You don't
1lid .......... lii1It. )'011 Inte
olx wlle11 your ,.n- · . - - ........ dial , ....
oide hohll Ill.. .....

w•

TODAY'S Ql1D110N

Your porlner """ club.
What do you 1-ICI wtth thla
same hand!

White

French

piece Iiving room suite ; 3

dinette sets; 3 coil spring s;
dresser ; chest of drawers; 'l
r ocker s; end table .

Rice's
' NEW" &amp; USEO FURNITURE
854 Second, 446-9523

WATKINS Producls Chr istmas
Gill Selections. Phone 446·
4761.
26i-tf

Jarrell's 235-642 - 6 points,
McKnight &amp; Davies Hdwr. and
P. Cl ifford 's 196-531 - 2 pol nls.
Falls Cily and R. Mitchell's
lU/·605-4 pis., Moose Lodge
. and R. Greer's 242·587 - 4
polnls.
Ashland Oil and P. Alderlgl's
221-575 -

4 point s, Marchi's

Carry Out and G. Marchi 's 190548 - 4 points.
Slandings'
Team
w. L.
French City
Mobil e Homes
94 3~
Larry's Wayside
92 36
Falls City
80 48
•Tawney's Studio
71 Si
Moose Lodge
12 56
Farmer's Hdwr .
66 62
Dock Inn
63 65
Ashland Oil
56 12
Marchi's Carry Out
52 76
Mc Kn l~ht - Davies
46 82
Fosler s Slore
44 84
City Ice &amp;Fuel
26 102

MONDAY BUSINESS
Monday, Dec. i8, bowling

points.

The b!ddllllf hos been:
West North
loot
Soudo
141

len.

PIECE

Prov incial bedroom suite only
2112 years old ; 4 piece sec·
li enal liv ing room sv it e; 2

as foll ows :

Gallo Wine and L. Angell 's
20S.S96 - 6 poin ts, Hart's Used
Cars and D. Duncan 2i5-612- 2

(NEWSPAPil (NTIOPOIIE ASSN .)

•z

Ave.

•

results are

"Yes," said Waldy. "But
this was the on!~ play ·that
would work."

s•••

.

USED FURNITURE

for Sale

it?"

'

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE fiOMES
1966 Shultz 12xso
19!8 Elcona 12 x 50
1968 Elcona 12 x 60
1973 Peerless 12 x 60
i960 Whilney 10 x 46
poin1s tram Foster 's Stor e and 1973 Holly Carl i2 x 60
1968 Roycroft 12 x 50
M. Canaday's 196·51 7.
i966
Schult 12 x 50
Larry' s Way side and C.
i966
Schult 12 x 50
Queen's 234·598 - 8 points,
i968
Elcona 12 x 50
Dock Inn and T. Roettker's 219i960 Whitney 10 x 46
613 - o points.
rawney' s Studio and T. 1969 Statesman 12 x 60
1973 Peerless 12 x 60
Rose's 576and K. White 's 576 8 points. City Ice &amp; Fuel and C. 1973 Kingswood 12 x. 60
1967 Topper 12 x 60
Perry 's 187-493 - 0 points.
Farmer's Hdwr . and M. 1969 Atlantic 12 x 60
1973 Holl ey Park 12 x 65
1971 Sylvan i2 x 60
1970 Hallma·rk 12 x 60
1970 Holley Park 12 x 60
1967 Town 8. Country 12 x 60
1965 Richardson 12 x 55
1962 Great Lakes 10 x 55
1961 Raycraft 10 x 46
1960 New Moon 10 x 50
1954 Castle 8 x 27
B&amp;S MOB'LE HOMES
Second &amp; Viand St.
Pl. Pleasant
I Next to Heck's I
292-tf

.J/ere's hoping that. all o(you
whose patronage we value so highly enjoy
the Christmas season to the fu'llest.

-

Real Estate For Sale

ClairVoyant About Queens

In !lie old days, Waldemar
von Zedtwitz of New ' York
was supposed to be almost
...-1--1--1--+~ clairvoyant when It came to
the problem of locating a
:..-1-+--t missmg queen . It appears
that he still possesses that
power as may be seen from
his success In making three
no-trump In a recent rubber
m-1 bridge game at the Caven.
dish Club.
After ducking the first
spade Waldy hail to win the
1-H continuation. He led . dummy's jack of diamonds and
1--+--1-~ overtook . with his queen.
West could not afford to duck
-1-+--+~ because of the heart suit so
West won and set up his la8t
-+--+--11--+--1
spade.
The nine of diamonds waa
overtaken by tbe 10 and
again West was lh. He
ca&amp;lled his last spade. After
seeing a dtta of club&amp; dll·
nrd frorn his partner West

legally l12-lowd one
49- Pat,ugew ay
113- A l late
SO-Swilt
. 11£-Benlan tu mor
S4-Artlfl ela l
't 18-Stalk
. channel s
119-Crippled
55- Had re cl ined
122-Pawl
56--Thin sca le
124- Hurrles.
59 - Spoors
125-Roman
60--Cut
s tatesman
61 - E ~te l~m a t l on
126--Wina·foote d
63-Unasplr•ted
128-Sii'IQ:inl voice
66-Symbol for tin 130--..fncountered
67-Symbol for Iron 131 - Endurtl
68--~akes pleasant U 2-Fraarant
olaor•tfn
10-Part of l !ahllne 13 5-Troplcal· lrult
(pl.l
131-Qulclo: stroke

Of
QUAliTY

WIN AT BRIDOE

By Oswald &amp;

a will

representative.

C. B. RADIOS, antennas •. also
pollee scanners; Dalley's
Radio Sh!'P, Box 2i B, Long
Bottom, Ohio.
·
12-2Hic

.QJ!06

- - - - - --

Shop . 245·5535.

·-

2 SIGNS

estimates , phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.

HENRY E. CLELAND
and ASSOCIATES
Office 992-2259
If no answer 992-2561 or 985420,.

.AK2
.AQ!062
+J9

GMAC Financing Available

L

marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . A. Jacob, sales

2 STORY HOME. full basement,
' bath &amp; If,, extra lot and attached garage; available
now; may be h~d with basic
furniture; near Pomeroy
Elementary School; phone
992-7384 or 992·7133.
12-24-6tc

23

$3,892
SADDLE. bridle, blanket and _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _30 l ·6
53.579
breal collar. I mon th old. Ph. 1970 DUSTER 340. 1966 Ford
$3,165
446-9700.
Gal axie Ph . 446-0668.
51,799
301 ~
~14
sleeps 5,

Pl. Pl easanl behing Red
Car pet Inn. Ph. 675-5384.
•
2B9·tf st:T

A VERY

" You ' ll Like 0·•" Quality Way of Doing 'Business"

doors and windows, carports,

kitchen, cellar, garage, 2
glassed
sunporches .
$12,800.00.
\
FROM USTDYOU
A GREAT BIG
HAPPY NEW YEARS

NORm(D)

m .s

wit h cooverter , same high
di scount on fold downs, sorn e
used units . Camp Con ley
Starc ra ft Sa les , Route 62 N. of

and

~n Eves. Til 6-Til S P.M. Sat.

SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-tfc

Real Estate For Sale

992 -SJ4l _

~omeroy

5-12-tfc
~--c-----

radio, one

011erchandiser wilh large sell· ONLy ONCE IN A LIFETIME
dosing s lidi ng door s, 3 door · will you . be b\Jying a diamond
white enamel, 4 monfhS- old,
engagement ring . At this
675 1265.
important time, your key to a

KARRcadillac
&amp; VAN
ZANDT
· Oldsmobile

.SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
992-2174

Owner &amp; Operator.

Opening lead-• Q

4.~ Provu

86-Mist•ke,
8~-cor•l lst,nd
89- S•rvtr

Teaford, Sr.

.

/J:.M-FM

'3800

largest
Bulldozer Rlidlator to the
Small~st Heater Core.
Nothan Biggs ·
.RadiJtor Specialist_.

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

REASONABLE rates. Ph .. 4464782, Gallipolis, John Russell.

24' 7" WS $4,892 lor
22' 7'" WS $4,475. lor
10' 7" WS ~3, 9 5 4 lor
18' 7" WS $3,499 for
SELF ·CDNTAiN ED

.

CARROLL NORRI.S DODGE.

s..l$1 "'JAt:Ort MOIIfiH ...,.
111: "Wilt oi IMtt." (c/o d l t -

.

Slewarl 's Hd wr . and C.
Queon's 21 4-629 - 6 poi nts.
Gallipol is Parts Whse. and W.
Denney's 213-542 - 2 poinls.
Johnson's Market and R.
Fer~u so n 's 206-567- 6 pts .,
O'Dell Lumber and T. Riese r's
226-S8i - 2 poinls.
Blue Fountain Molel and K.
While's 209-593 - 6 points.
Moose Lodge and E. Thomas'
201 -554 - 2 poinls.
Chris Craft and H. Wh ile's
194·526 - 6 polnls, Firestone
apd J. Bailey's 515 and B.
Radel ill's 515 - 2 poinls.
C. &amp; P. Telephone and B.
Cox's 20i-Si6 - 6 poinls, The
Feds and 8. Hall's 185-529 - 2
polnls.
Corbin &amp; Snyder and J.
Lane's 190-580 - 4 poi nls,
Jenkins's Concrele and R.
Graham 's 225-533 - 4 poin ls.
Slandings:
T•am
W. L.
Gallo Wine
102 18
Stewarl's Hdwr.
84 36
Harl's Used Cars
74 46
0' Dell Lumber
68 52
Moose Lodge
68 52
Corbin &amp; Snyder
64 56
Blue Founlain
62 58
Firestone
56 64
54 66
Johnson's Mkt.
Chris Crall
54 66
Gallipoli s Parts
52 68
C. &amp; P. Telephone
52 68
Feds
30 80
Jenkins Concrete
20 100

.,
f'm·f's1uJH is wliaL · !Jfm
11 ~erJ whe1l the par t y be·
lmul 111m l(t'/IS. j rn•f bt•(rll'('
tldJ·i·;:J as ,. ., ,,,,. uonr lr'IJ/.

,.,.,,, ~.0. . . . . . . Cllr
!tofloo, N. Y..t. H.'t. 'litlt.

'.
,)

I

___

73 1f? in H. full. view displa y

'57 CHEVY, good condition. Call
446·3592 or 446-9777,

Chri s1mas Sate

• No Payments Until After Jan. 1, 1973

-- - -SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

Virgil B.

-----

Miller , Rio Grande Ba rber

fURNITURE

105- Mo\.ln ta lns ol

109- Swaetheart

77- 0utch tvwn
78-G ra ln

Pomeroy. H~me &amp;Auto

.954 .
.54
+QIOSH
... A96
Both vulnerable
North Eut South
I.
Pus IN.T.
Pass 3N.T. Pass Pass

98-lnqu lres.
99- Part of foot
(pl .)
100-Fiaure s. of

ll l - Ran~:a

7 5- F~ol i cs

and.

SOUTH (D)

n ltr~te
9~ ha l dnn elty

47- lnuet

lribes.men
72-Atrlform
fluid
13--VIew

Phone 992-2Q94

606 E. Main/ Pomeroy, 0 .

,owner new Caqillac trade.

LAYAWAY FOR .XMAS
Open to 7; closed Mondays

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Open8Tit5
Monday,ihru Saturday

Cl1mate Control air conditioning ,

992-2094

-~UARANTEED­

YOURS"

SUver·metalllc finish, blue interior, full power equipment,

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E. Main

~-~...,.:....

Valley View Greenhousepric es ran~e fr om S'3.1S .
S6.75. 'h mite E. ol Por ter.
Phon e-· 3$8-Slbo.

"WISH YOU AND

70 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

bi scouot pr'iced.

Phone 992-2511
or 992-3918

4~KJIO

90-Neaat tve
prefix
91 - cyprlnolclflsh
94- Potanl um

42- Whlp
44- Weary

11- lndonesian

On Most American cars

location, close to school and

Perry Como special and decided Joey 's a
BY JACK O'BRIAN
modern star-version of the kids who made it big
TAKE IT OFF AND RAKE IT IN
from the chorus in his generation (such as Joan
NEW YORK (KFS ) - There 's gold in them
Blondell, Ruby Keeler etc.) ... Midtown apartthar G-strings: stripper Rose Ia 1 Rose (not
ment
houses are hiring guards - to chase
nearly so famous as Gypsy Rose Lee, Margie
Hart, Ann Corio, Hinda Wasau etco) left $730,000 hookers soliciting in front. Such as 16~ W. 56th
when she died recently; $400,000 in cash! ... St. ... Marta 's of Bergen Street? It's on W. 49th
Gypsy left more than a million when she St. .. . More New Year's Eve: Peter's Backyard
on W. 10tnSt., $25for all the champagne you can
floW!ced off to the big Minsky 's in the sky.
Jack Paar's telecomehack pact with ABC- swallow, dinnern funny hats ek
ABC-TV Eyewitness News team's
TV .included his insistence Dick cavett should
togetherness isn't all on camera : they're
be retained. Paar doesn't admire Johnny
convening
next week at the Press Box - with
Carson's style much ... Ladybird Johnson's
Tex Antoine · as entertainment chairman
memories of George Hamilton's Lynda Bird
period are warm: "Maybe every girl needs a promising NOT to have Howard Cosell as Santa
.. . Mrs, &amp;rnard Gimbel celebrated her BOth
George Hamilton in her life. At least he made
Lynda realize she could be beautiful" ... Lon- birthday at her Greenwich estate and made the
don's ' In-hotel, the Dorchester, wouldn't let juniors happy - each place card envel91&gt;e
J
~
'
'
contained 80 one-buck~ bills; grand ·old lady'.r •
Geraldine Chaplin and her (can6ldly) liVe-in
Carol Channing's upcoming "Lorelei"
beau check in double ... 'Pierre Galante's book '
musical
has the Bdwy chorus kids beaming
about Coco Chane! will state the old fashioo
maven took a Nazi as a WW II occupation-lover. hopefully: comes in with a nine-month
guarantee ; it's a worked-over "Gents Prefer
Shorl of fuel, eh?
The Long Island R. R. strike seems sure to Towheads" ... Stiller and Meara's hysterically
last past · Yule : Jerry Keebler 's organ was funny new comedy album, "Laugh When You
Like," contains an uproarious satirical swat
mov~d into Penn Station for its annual
Christma music to holiday throngs. The other entitled " Rhoda Blabbit" reedling Rona
day a crew removed it ... Magda Gabor's plush Barrett's TV inanities. Anna Meara figured
Southampton mansion burned to the expensive they'd never meet - and so they are booked to
ground· ... It was politics-plus at "21": Sen. co-star with the H'wood columnist on Alan
George McGuff, Sen. Jake Javits and ex-Mayor ·King's year-end special. They hope she 'II never
Bob Wagner ... Eve Arden's touring. in "But- hear the album. Not a chance. It's a cinch for
terflies Are Free. " Great casting : at New best-seller status.
Publishers Row can't figure Sen. Tom
Jersey's Meadowbrook early in '73.
How's this for versatility : Richard Hanser, Eagleton's indecision about writing a book - he
one of the finest writers aroWld in books or' TV has a dozen offers - about his travails and
documentaries (Victory at Sea , The Coming of traumas . One bookman figures he is waiting for
Christ etc. ) ranges from his last fascinating the best-timed political moment .. . Rex
tome about Hitler :_ to his new one about J esus. Harrison's writing his memoirs : 44 years acThe Westchester (Mamaroneck ) writer's ting, five wives, dozens of swinging romances,
"What Manner of Man Is This" has advance etc . ... The always edgy French \empers are
raves which makes Simon &amp; Schuster hopping mqre abrasive : annual TV-tax per-set climbed
happy ... Virginia de Luce, star of "New Faces to $26 from $14. Now they know how we feel
of 1952," changed her name to Blue Dove and is about over-charging .. . Bill's Gay 90s New
sparking an American Indian theatrical project Year's Eve: $11 minimum, dinner alone $9 to
.. . Hamilton Morge , CBS-TV cameraman for 20 $12.5{), $6 bar minimum, floor , show stars
years who sued CBS for $15 million claiming Dorothy Arms and The Revelers upstairs,
"The Beverly Hillbillies" was his concept and oldtime vaudeville on the first floor ... Trlcia
script, won a new trial in his se.emingly im- Nixon and hubby Eddie Cox are off to Russia for
possible quest. Louis Nizer is his new lawyer. Yuletide. Seems a contrast in terms, Moscow
Jimmy Gagney saw Joey Heatherton on the and Chdstmas.

21- Permlsslon

Clean &amp; guaranteed.
•
NEW F URNI:TUR E
Sola Beds &amp; Recl iners.

Otase Hdwe. Co.

trucks and low-boy for hire.

house, 3 bedrooms, excellent

~~

16--Mature

afso

READY -MIX
CONCRETE
Real Estate For Sale
delivered
rfght
to your
Mobile Homes For Sale
Phone 992-2602.
project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
HOUSE
in
Long
Bottom,
phone
12-2i-2otp
3 BEDROOM lra iler, partially
estimates, Phone 992-3284.
985-3529.
furni shed, some underpinning - - - - - - -- - Goegleln Ready -Mix Co. ,
and steps; ph.one 742-4833.
HOUSE FOR SA~E . 114 Brick
Middlep&lt;H:t. Ohio.
12-22-61c Slreet. Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
6·30-tfc
CASH paid for all makes and

17-Note ol sca lt

Estimates. ·We

•650o

t,J sed furniture, appllances.

cabinets in kitchen, close to
radio stati on in Bradbury,

WMP0/1390

15- Woollr

Free

condttfomng, S new whitewall fires.

Rt. 1 "at caution light''
TUPPERS PLAINS

haul fill dirt, top $Oil. Dump

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

plus g1gant1c.

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

done by hot:r or contract.

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
after 1 p.m. or phon&amp; 992·
5232.

&lt;-- - - - ---'--

reduction on all dogs . All A.K·
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
1220 washington Blvd.
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
12-13-tfc

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1972
60-Nerrow
openln1
61-Pos.. a.."

ca rpeted. $3,100 ; phone 985424.8.
12-22-61p

Phone 742·3812. 'display of mobile homes .
.
12·i4·i21c always available at ...

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS

. conditioner . like new, fully

AKC Toy Poodl es, wormed and 'complete mQbil e . ha~e;

puppies, 4 wee ks old ; ca ll9925072.

We talk to you
like a person.

- - -- -- -

li·21 ·JIC

Pets For Sale

REGI ST ERED Ir is h Setter

healthful , prosperous and Help Wanted
Happy New Year. Edward WANTED, male Social Secur ily
IBuck) and Mary Schaefer.
or Old Age pensi oner to help
12.24-ltc
move male from bed to Cha ir .
Contact /Ws. Ed J. Smith,
WE WISH to express our most
phone 992-2853.
heartfelt thanks to everyone
12·21-3tc
whoso generously gave blood,
'
6ffered to give blood and sent
cards and gifts to Isabel PLUMBING and Healing man,
experienced ; If not ex during her illness and con ·
Reflenced and honesl, do not
· linemen! to the Holzer
.
apply
I phone 992-2511 or 992·
Medical Center. Your many
3918.
kindnesses will never be
12-6-tfc
~ ·forgotten: l'he Harold ~ar ­

Notice

585. C~ ll Ravenswood 273-9521
or 273-9893.
ll -30-tf c

PARKVIEW Kennels going out

ba sement , automati c heat,
Lincoln Height s; phone 742·

5092.

machine. Li ke new in walnut
cabinet. Makes design stitches, Iig-zags, button holes,
blind hems. overcasts, etc.

4-i2·ffc

HOU SE . 4 rooms and ba th. full

992-2448

' means · to wish each and
everyone a very Merry '
Christmas and a peaceful,

nahan Family .,

phone 992-251 1.
.:.......
12·5-lfc

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

to our families , many friends

i~ ;

FURN ISHED 2 bedroom
aparl men t, adul ts only ,
Midd lepor t ; phone 992-3874.
.J2·12·1fc

Hot Water Healers
Plumbing
Electrica I Work

WE WISH to extend our thanks

__

___
lived

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS

Card of Thanks
atten1iveness ~

••HEit"

on ly; phone 992-5592.

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

$1 .50 for 50 worlj minimu m.

· Each add itibna l word 2C.
BLIND ADS

- - - -- 3 ROOM f urnished house, adults SI·NG E R Automat ic sewin g

Da~k grey finish with red lealh; r Int.•.full pow~r
equ,pment, AM-FM stereo, Climate Conlrol air

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

Concrete Work
Remodeling

MOTORS, I·NC.

72 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

For Sale

CHRISTMAS Trees - Nor way 1966 RAMB LER, American 4 ANTIQUE f)llmp organ, ali
door station wagon, cheap.
ong•nal e)(cept new bellows.
spruce, white Pine, Scotch
446-3408 titter 5 p.m .
Over 80 vears old. MadP. bv
pin e,
red
ceda r
and,
Tayl or and Fraley Organ Co.,
Evergreen pine, 41o 12 ft . tall
. 301 ·3
Worces ter, Mass. One bellows
on lot beside Heck' s in Pt.
52 CU. FT. reach in display
typo .
Pho ne
992·3904,
Pl easant.
Syr acuse, 0 .
290·10 cooler, 731!4 in. W. x 32 IJ4 iri 0 x

$TARCRAFT

SPENO TIME
SAVE ~·s

For Sale

For Sale

CfiRISTMAS SALE
POINSETTIAS

SMITH NELSON

Now Thru Dec. 31'

.

consecut ive inse rtion s.
18 cents per wo rd s ix con -

WE .AT

ON ANY

For Sale
Mobile Homes For Sale
SHOTGU N MATC H, Sunday.
TWO
BE
DROOM
mobile
home
Dec . 24lh. 12 noon, Side Hill
DUE TO lay·olf, 8 track slereo NEED ANOTHER BEDROOM,
5 P .M , Oay 'Before Pub li c~t ti on
on Old Rl. 33, adulls onl y;
MQnday Deadlin e 9 a .m .
Gun Club; fac tory choke 9uns
In w al nu1 co nso le ; pay
OR FAMILY ROOM
phone 992-6294 or 992-6385 balance ol 598.80 or pay 58 per DEN
Cancellation - f=orr e~ t ion s
onl y ; no alcoholic beverages
FOR
YOUR
MOBILE
·
atler 6 p.m.
Will be accepted until9 a.m . lor
al lowed ; assor ted rnea ts ; soff
month ; phone 9'12-5331.
HOME?
EASILY
DONE
Day of Publica tion
.
12-24-IOtc
. ' 12-12-tfc WITH A VEMCO ADD-A·
drinks will be sold ; . fr ee
· REGULATIONS
1=offee : di r ectiMs to·match ROOM .. SEE IT AT : .
The Publisher r eser ve s ttl e
FUR NISHE D apa'rt menl. 3 -'------'-~-31 z mi les NOrth of Rutland to
JUST
taken
In
delu
xe
Zig.
Zag
·
YOUNG'S MOBILE fiOME
r ight to edit or r eiect a n y ads
rooms and b~ th , modern ;
Fo r es t Ac res Pdrk, fake
sewing
mac
hine.
Thi
s
SAL.
ES, ST. · RTE . 7 &amp; 35 I
deemed
ob j er:tl onaL
Th e
· phone 992-2623.
publisher will not be responsi ble
gravel road to fi(S ! road left
ma
chine
dar
ns.
em·
(
BE
L 0 W S I LV E R
12·17-tfc
for more than one incorrect
t 2 m ile; there w i ll be signs
br6iderles. makes bu l· MEMORIAL
BRDG . l.
insert ion .
from par k to match : not
lonholes. al l wilhout al - GALLIPOLIS.
RATES
TRAILER spaces; extra large lac hmenls; pay balance of
12-lHic Dozer &amp; End loader work,
respons ible for accidents.
Fpr Want Ad Service
lots. $25 a month , Velma
538.50 or pay $6 per month ; -- - - -- -- ponds. basement, land12-21 ·31c
5 cents per Wor d one inser tion
Zuspan , Mason, W. Va .
phone 992-5331.
scaping. We have 2 size · ,
Minimum Cha rge 75c
11.2qot p
12-il-tfc 1970 · MOBILE Home, a ir- dOzers, 2 size loaders. Work
t7 cents per word thr ee
. NFORMATION
DEADLINES

For Sale

_...,.....,..,...._..,..,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _l

·r-- ..,.--

/1e's. from

. thl! wrOnQ
f!L de

or the

ract\6 -

,

I

~~

success ful pur chase Is your

jeweler . Let us help you at
Tawney's Jewelers . .

- -- - --

302-2

�22 - ',he Sunday Times- Sentihel, Sunday, Dec. 24, 1972

.

'

.For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memory
WE

Real Estate For Sale

Help Wanted

THE family

of

Homer

sent floWers and food , all the

help and kindness fro m
friends and neighbors. M rs .
Homer Johnson. all hl.s
chil dren. mother, brofhers

and sisters .

302·1

IN MEMORY of Oscar Spires

who passed away December
25. 1958. Many lonely years

yave passed since God called
you home. Your sweet
memories still lin ger in my
hearlforever . Wife , chi ldren.
granqc;hildren.
302·1
IN MEMORY of my father .
Elgan Sealey, Who passed
away December 25, 1938.
Just a cluster of beautiful

memorieS
Sprayed with a million tears;
Wish you -could ha ve spared

him, God, .

·

For just a few more years.
Daughter, Nina S. Burks.
302· 1

- - - - ' - ' -- - ' A CHR ISTMAS memory. of our
husband and father, William
C. Boar'd, who passed away
Oct. 1. 1911.. ll)s lust a cluster
of memories, sprayed with a
million tears. Wishing God
could have spared you for
many, many more year s. To
some you may be forgotten, to
some a part of the past, Jo us
who loved you. losf, your,
Your memories will alWays
last. Sadly missed by wife,
son, daughter and grand chil dren .
302· 1

Notice
RUSS'S Glass Service. Glass for
all needs, We sell windshields ,
storm windows and doors,
awn lngs and mlrrors . 704
Pine St., Rio Grande, 245·5048.
295·11

-------

TWO·WAY Radios Sales &amp;
Service. New and used CB 's,

police monqors,

ant~nnas,

et c. Bob ' s Cilizens Band
Radio Equip ., Georges Creek
Rd ., Gallipolis, Ohio 446·4517.
212·11

- - ----RALPH'S Carpet &amp; Upholstery

Cleaning
Service . Free
estimates. Ph . 446·0294. Ralph
A. Davis, oWner.
9·11

- - -- - - - -

ROOFING and gutler work .
William Mitchell, 388.8507.
67-lf

DAY CARE
SU N VALLEY Nursery School ,
I icensed by Slate of Ohio, l'h
miles west ot new hospital .
577 Sun Valley Dr . Ph. 446·
3657. Day care thai says "we
care." Madge Hauldren ,
Owner; Loredith &amp; John
Hauldren, Operators.
114·11

---,---'--- - -

GOT a Junk f'roblem? We pick
up junk car bodies and buy
scrap iron and metaL 3888583.
297·12

Wanted To Do
ROOFING and spouting, ex·
perienced roofers. Ph. 388·
8114, James Marcum .
295·30

----"---

TOOL shar pen i ng ,
saws ,
scissors, shears, home and
garden tools . Sharp Shop.
Alley rear 147 Second.
216·11

=--:-:--REMODELING, · building new

rooms , cement. roofing,
sidi ng, furnace Ins. J . H.
Queen &amp; Son, 446·9271.
68·11

----NEED a Santa? Phone 675·1954.

2'16·7

Help Wanted
SALESMAN
A large nationally known
company has opportunities
for a person interested In a
sales career in the food Industry . Initial ossignmenl
will be to service retail and
institutional accounts .
Prefer college graduate with
business
administration
major.
Will
consider
minimum 2 year academic
work towards a business
degree.
E•cellent
promotional 'opportunities .
Top ·fringe benefils. To ex.
ptore this challenging OP·
portunity
please · send
resume including academic
background,
work
ex·
perience, and ul.ary history
in confidence to BoJt 244, c-o
Daily Tribune. Equal op.
porlunity employer.

.

·liJilOJUWIL

Baker cook for day shill,
experience helpful but not
necessary, also waitress, 10
p.m. to 6 a.m. shift. · Good
working condHior1 . Paid
vacation. Apply in person
only a1· Bob Evans Stl[!!ak
House.

Johnson w9uld like to express

our heartfell thanks to Dr .
· Kemp, the nurses , Rev .
· Patterson. Miller's Honw for
Funerals, all the people who

Real Estate For Sale

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

THE ,

WISEMAN
.

REALTY

'

AGENCY

25 Locust st:
Howard Brannon, ·Broker
Off. 446·2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve. 446·1226 or 446·2674

SEMf.DRIVERS NEEDED
LOCAL companies need Certified Sem i- Drivers . Earn
S300·5400 per week. No ex.
perienCe . necessary. will
train . For application cal l 317·
636-2675, or write Coastway
American Sys tems. P. 0 . Box
11125; Indianapolis, Indiana
46201.
298·30

Real Estate For Sale

WISHES YOU, A·

MERRY CHRISTMAS

CHRISTMAS TIME, 1972
CHR ISTMAS means a tot of
And wo~ld also like to thank each and every
things . TQ each of us here
person tn the area for helping us have our
Brannon Realty, Christma s
most successful year. We broke all the rei!l
also means three of the ,best
things in .life : good heallh •.
estate records ever set in. Gallia County.
good home and good friends.
When we look back over the
3 Bedroom Home
years and th ink of Christmas
Ideal Business
days gone by, we can sti ll
SOLD-SOLD-SOLD
MIDDLE: AGED lady to live In
Location
pause
and
thank
God
for
our
and care for elder ly lady on
many blessings tha t have
VERY NICE 3 BEDROOM
WE HAVE BROKEN ALL
weekends. Call after 5 446·
HOME
WITH CARPE TED
come
our
way
.
So,
we
think
of
REAL ESTATE S.&lt;.LES
oan,
LIVING AND
DINING
RECORDS TH IS YR . BY A
you at this firne of yea r . We
302·6
ROOM . FULL BASEMENT ,
HUGE MARGIN . YOU
hope this wi ll be a truly fhrry
CENTRAL AIR, GARAGE
GUES SED IT - WE NEED
Christmas for you and
AN D LARGE LOT . AB ·
LISTINGS LIKE NEVER
everyone at your house, and
SOL UTELY ONE OF THE
BeFORE . If YOU'RE
that the New Year will bless
BEST
BUSINESS
THINKING OF SELL ING
TELEPHONE
answering_
your home with all of the good
LOCAT I ONS . BETWEEN
CALL US FOR THE BE ST
GAL L IPOLIS AND PO INT
device. C. U. Miller at Rio
things In life.
RESULTS POSSIBLE .
PLEASANT
FOR THE
NEW l,tSTING
Grande, 245·5,535 Barber
MONEY . PERFE CT FOR
May the happjtte88 of
HERE is the place you have
Shop.
3 Be~room Home
IN SU R A NCE OFFICE,
302·3
been
looking
tor
at
the
price
BEAUTY SHOP . SERVICE
friendships be re·
. yoU can afforc;L 44 acres
10 YR . OLD 3 BEDROOM
STA TION . PLENTY OF
JUNK autos and scra p metal .
located on Lincoln Pike just 10
kindled thu Christm••·
HOME WITH GARAGE
ROO M FOR 20 R 3 MOBI LE
AND FLAT LO T IN TOWN .
388·8776.
mi. from Gallipolis. 10 acres
HOMES . YOU WON'T FIND
GO T TO SEE THIS QUICK .
A BETTER BUY .
. 245-78
bottom land, fair fence, farm
1T WON ' T LAS T LONG .
pond, . creek, and good well.
Brand New
WANTED to buy, sell or trade,
Large bar n, extra good,
toy electric tra in, 446-4843.
Large Rustic Lodge
tobacco base. 1967 mobile
3 Bedroom
240·11
home in good condition . A
With 7 Acres
BEAUTIFUL ·. COU N TRY
good small cattle farm, all for
LOCAT ION 6 M IL ES OUT
ONE OF THE PRETTIEST
only $10,500.
IN
ClfY
SC HOOL
LOCA TIONS IN GALLIA
DISTR I CT.
3
NICE
REDWOOD RANCHER
CO. OVERLOOKING A
BEDROOMS, BEAUTIFUL
THREE bedroom, large ' eal·i n
FAL LS IN RACCOON CK .
KITC HEN AND HUGE LOT .
Need Another Bldg.?
kitchen,, cat hedral ce iling in
TH E OLD SWI MMING
IT'S YOURS FOR 122.900.00.
Jay Sheppard 446·0001
SEE our aluminum bldgs .
the spacious living room with
HOLE IS IN THE FRONT
Denver K, Higley 446·00!1211'
, Heavy duly, wit~ flooring ,
fireplace and deep pile ca r Very Good Buy
YAR D . 3 TO 5 HUGE
wired for electric. Also West
pet, large file bath, plenty
BEDROO M S,
FULL
For Bargain
Virgi nia chunk coal. drain
c lose ts , two car oa rport,
BASEME NT,
2 . FIRE
Hunter
PLACES. MODERN KIT .
tile. bell file, cement and
double slorage room , well
CHEN . JUST A PERFECT
morlar . Galli polis Block &amp;
landscaped lawn accenled by
LARGE 7 YR. OLD 3
SPOT .
Coal Co., 123'h Pine, 446·2783.
a hand hewn redwood fence .
BEDROOM
H6ME
207·11
16 ACRES
EVERYTHING MODERN ; .
Outstanding Brick
FU LL BASEMENT AND
ALL ELECTRIC hom e--. 19'x24'
GARAGE
ON
FL
AT
LOT
IN
NewGMC
LR with fireplace , beaut.iful
J
BED ROO M S WITI-I
CIT Y SCHOOL DI STRICT . 2
Truck Headquarters
LOVELY APOINTMENTS
kitchen with range and ref . 112
MILES FROM
TOWN .
T HR OUG HOUT.
V-ERY
1966 'h Ton GMC Pickup
basement, large 30'x60'
PR I CED UNDER $24,000.
PRETTY
K IT CHEN
&amp;
1969 Olds 88
.
building, well slacked pond.
YOU WON 'T F IND THIS
FAM
IL
Y
ROOM
AREA
.
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
IN TOWN
LARGE AND WELL ·BUILT
CARPET, 11/2 BATH AND
1971 3 !on Chevrolet Truck
3 BR, spa cious paneled and
liOME ANYW H ERE ELSE
FLA T LOT . S33.500.00.
THE .LEADER SINCE 1900 IN · carpeted LR. eat.in kilchen,
FOR TH IS MONEY .
1970 'h ton Ford XL T Pickup
SERVING THE NATION ' S
1970 '12 ton Chevrolet Pickup
aluminum siding , 17'x30'
BUYERS
&amp; SELLERS.
Owner Anxious
1969 '12 ton Chevrolet Pickup
garage and workshop $13.000.
Ph. 446-0008
1969 International 1600
4 BR
To Sell
GALL lA CO.'S LARGEH
1969 3 ton GMG
LARGE two story , aluminum
REAL ESTATE
VERY CLEA N WEL L KEPT
siding and stone, all buill-i n
1967 °/o T. Chev. PU
NEW LISTING - One of th e
SALES
AGE·NCY
3
BEDROOM
HOME
.
IT
'S
6
kitchen, formal OR. laundry
1968 1/2 T. GMC PU
largest modern homes on the
0 FF ICE 446-3643
YRS. OLD BU T LOOK S
1
room, garage, l'h lot. quick
1968 h T. GMC PU
market. Thi s 3 BR beauty
EVENINGS CALL
LIKE
NEW ,
LOVELY
possession. S18,800.
New 11 fl . camper
offers a modern eaf.fn kif ·
E. M. " IKE " WISEMAN
KITCHEN, NICE L A ND ·
2 STORY
.
1964 '12 T. GMC PU
chen. dini ng rm .• 15x22 LR
446·3796
SC APED LOT IN GOOD
E. N. WISEMAN 446·4500
NEIGHBORHOOO
ON
1966 1/2 T. Ford PU
with a stone firep lace, 2 FOUR BR, lwo bath, fam ily
EDGE OF TOWN .
room , all electric kitchen ,
1967 1 T. GMC Dump
balhs, cent. air, full basement
DR , fireplace in LR, la undry,
1969 112 T. GMC PU
with finished den, 2 car
workshop , copper plumbing .
1968
T. GMC PU
garage and a 100 ft . lot in
1960 1 Ton Ford flat.
Gallipolis Twp .
519.500.
1967 112 T. GMC Pickup
ONE-THIRD ACRE LOT
MASSIE
1964 CO 1600 International truck THI S NEARLY NEW 3 BR 7 ROOMS, 3 BR, 2 bath, luxury
· kitchen, ca rport, workshop, in
1967 '/ 2 T. GMC PU
brick offers gnd livi ng with
Addison Twp.
1966 '¥• T. GMC PU
l'h baths, 1/\' ~rpet, cent.
LOTS
1967 v, T. GMC Ptckup
air, dream ~
"· double
1968 1h T. GMC Pickup
garage and pair,
••ner has PRICED from $1,600 l o SJ,OOO.
Call for more lnformallon .
1967
T. GMC Pickup
been tr ansterrt ~ nd Is
WE HAVE BUYERS
anxious to sell.
SOMMERS G.M.C.
NEAR CLAY Sc. _ • Bdr'!JlS.,
TRUCKS, INC.
FOR properlles In all are~~ · We
ttv. f m . '13~ x 2a· '~llh"'F:P.:
133 Pine St.
need 3 and 4 BR homes in
ADDISON - Lovely 3 BR home
formal di n . rm .•. modern
446·2532
Gallipolis and near town . Plus
wilh brick front. carport,
kitchen, H.W. floors, walnut
- we need farms and small
267·11 utility rm ., and cent. air . E· Z
trim , full base . and dry. Gar.
acreage. Co !I Brannon Realty 11 0 TH IRD Avenue . 6 room
---------financing on $21.000.
20'x20' (block), 'h A. lot with
'
frame
cottage,
1
(loor
plan
,
any time.
GOO D CLEAN LUMP and
plenty shrubbery. This house
air·cond itioning ,
car peting
sloker coal. Carl Winters Rio LAND TO I t';." I.OP -1 2 acre
also 2 outbui ldings. Use of
has quality hard to find In
parce l a-,VV-{..1\ 'imits an d NEW 3 bed room home, natural
Grande. Phone 245·5115.'
today 's. co nstruction . Only.
alley In back .
6·11 ha s frontage • . V Jfe rd.
$27.500.
gas,
city
wa t er ,
full
basement, with garage •. part NICE neighborhood. close to
SINGER Sewing Machine Sales LIKE CITY LIVING? We have4
Bir ch front, $16,800, Plants
schools 6 rooms with part SPRING VALLEY- Bi· Level,
homes in town priced from
&amp; Service. All niodets In
3 large bdrms. with deep and
Sub-division . Call Delbert
basement.
air condlti'onlng,
stock. Free delivery. Serv ice $7,000 lo $15,000.
wide c losets, all factory
Clark , 446·0390.
ca rp eting , 1 car' _garage In
guaranteed. Models priced
kllchen with dishwasher and
278·26
basement . Va cant, ready for
113
from 569.95. French City L.o . C.A·T· I-O· N
disposal. Large l iv. rm . wllh
immediate
occupancy
.
SECO ND AVE. Elderly 2
Fabri c Shoppe, Si nger ap.
carpet, large re c. rm . with
story mansion could be used BY OWNER. 3 BR home, 2
proved dealer, 58 Court St .•
carpet and bar. 2 car gar.
9
AC
RE
S
2
miles
from
Rio
baths . exce ll ent conditio n,
as a 3, 4 or 5 BR home. Dining
Ph . 446·9255.
with elec . dr. This house has
Gr ande, S3,500.
close to town. Must sell, pr ice
rm. and family rm . each ha ve
308·11
cen . air, is only 4 yrs . old, well
r educed, $12. 900. 446·4782.
fireplaces. New cabinets in
:::-~~~-constructed and located on a
kitchen,
,
1112
baths,
garage,
286·23 NEW ranch style house on
TY PEWRITER S.
Smit h.
large tot.
1
Route 35. l r1 baths, car peting
pallo and part basement.
Corona, Royal, Olivell! ,
with garage. Lot size 70X170.
Don ' t wall too long to see tt.ls
Underwood , manual an d
VINTON - 7 rms . and bath,
one,
be
cause
it
probably
electric. Simmons Printing
carpeted, ha s alum. siding,
FIVE
room
doll
house
com
won' t be o.n the market long.
and Office Equipment.
storm drs. and windows, new
pl etely remodeled, beam
235·11
roof and clly water . Located
ce
il
i
ng,
ca
rpeted,
full
CHARMING HOME of bri ck
on 1.25 A. good garden land ;
basemen t , storm doors and
and frame construction Is just
PI PE S, Pipes, Pipes, GBD,
has berries, grapes, pear,
wi
ndows,
one
car
garag
e.
for you . Formal dining rm., 2
Cheratan, BBB. Jobey, Hilson
NEW &amp; USEI:t
cherry
and apple trees. Only
Priced $15, 000.
fireplace s, paneled den, I· BEAMS , Channel, angle,
and others. Tawney' s Pipe
$14,000.
Office
446-1066
garage and sc reened porch
and Trophy House. 422 Second
sheet and plate steel, rounds ,
Evenings
are only a few of the many
Ave.
NEAR K.C. H. Sc. - Beautiful
flals , reinforcing bars and
Ron
Canaday
446-3636
highlights of this atlracllve
199·tf
Colonia l, 8 big rms .. 3 baths,
mesh, rail, pipe, cu lverts and
Russell Wood 446-4618
hillside home.
all carpeted, full finished
, equipment. Prompt drill ing,
WELL kept carpels show the
base., $15 per mo.• Nal. gas
Ne iman Co .. Nelson vi ll e,
results of reg ular Blue Lustre LIVE 8. COLLECT RENT. 2
Ohio, P,O. Box 2'/8, Ph. 753.
heat. Loc;aled on a 3 A . lot.
brand new mobile homes on aspot cleaning . Rent electric
1554. Call coll ect.
Also has a metal barn 30'x60'
Neal Realty
fla t lot 2 mi. from new
shampooer Sl al Centra l
and storage bldg. Asking
181·11
hospital. Only $13,900.
Supply Co.
$40,000.
LOT 67' x 112' located at 54
284·11
'
Terr ie r ,
Ml DDL EPORT- Lovely 6 rm . MANCHESTER
Gar fi eld Avenue. $1,000.
GARFIEL D AVE . Extra
modern home with 3 BR,
standard and loy puppies.
LOST bright car pel colors ...
nice, 5 rooms on first floor ,
Albany , Ohio. Phone 698-2571.
buill-in k itchen. 7 fireplaces
res1ore th em with Blue
NEW LISTING
wllh rec . rm . and cooking
PLUS
4
renlal
unils
renting
300·3 3 BE DR OOM home al 1809
Luslre .
Rent
electric
facilities In base. This house
for $555 per month .
sham pooer $1 al G. C. Murphy
Ches tnut Street. Jus t recently
has all new carpel, tile
3 AKC Brittany Spaniel puppies,
Lower Store .
painted inside and out. Carpet
ceilings , paneling,
and
1 AKC German shortha ir, 2
284·11 LIKE NEW - 1970 SCH ULT 12
in living r oom and three
awnings on wi ndows. Located
x 64. This is a real bargai n for
coon dogs. Phone 256· 1366.
bcdrr1on1 s. Would make a
on a .4 A. lot wilh plenty nice
Mobile home lovers. This
300-3
gr ()d inves tm enJ .
shrubbery . Lot is 42'x410' and
'73 K IRKWOOD mobile home,
home Is compleloly furnished
Office Phone 446·1694
goes to !he r iver. Gar. 20'x24'
t 4 x 65. all electric, $7.500.
and for on ly $10,500, you also M A T C H I N G
deIuxe
Evenings
plus a new mefal bldg . Price
Phone 446-4930. Ask for VIck ie
get cent. air, WW carpet,
Wes tinghou se washe r and
Charles M. Neal 446·1546
$23,000.
after 6 p.m. 245·5008.
was her, dr yer, patio and
dry~r . Phone 446·3507.
J. Michael Neal 446-1503
2'18·6
cellar . To lop it oft, you get _
300·3
NEIGHBORHOOD RD.
300 fl. !rootage on Route 160.
NEW
BRICK
HOME
Secllon, 24' x 55', same as
ALL TYPES of bui ld ing
. 3 GE NTLE ponies, 2 gentl e 3 LARGE bedrooms all electric
new,
double lavoratory bath
materials, bloc;k, brick, sewer MIDDLEPORT - ELEGANT 2
~fsfs . Call 388·9991 or 388.
with ce ntral air, carpellng,
wi fh shower. Lot 85' x 125'.
pipes, windows, lintels, eoc.
stor y brick contains 12 rms .
paneli ng In k lichen and
$14,500.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
This Is !he home of the late
300·6
family
room
,
lVl bath, utility
0 . Phone 245·5121 after 5.
Dr . Cluff and can be bough!
room, factory k.itchen with RODNEY 1972 Schultz
12J.tf
PALOMINO horse, very 9enlle.
tar below replacement .
range , di shw asher and
Mobil e home, 14' x ill', all
Call 388·9991 after 4 o clock .
disposa l, 2 ca r garage wlfh
elec. cen. air and located on
INVESTME NT - Look ing for a
300·6 . electric opener. Slate en .89 A. lot. Pri ce $14,900.
store building? Well, we have
fra nc e, oak trim with birch
one In Vinton with 2 apart· AKC Toy Poodl es 8. Pekinges~s.
94doors. 112 mile from new CENTENARY - Good 3 or 4
Phone 256·6553.
·
men ts upstairs. 2400 sq. ft. on
hospital on large level lot.
bdrm . Ranch . It has H.W.
each floor. $15,000.
300·3
floors wllh carpet in llv. rm.
Phone: 446·1079 or 446·1854.
293.ff
and hall. Some paneling .
CHESH IR E
TRA I LER
Large kilchen with plenty
PARK - 19 stall s, 7 mobile
cabinets.
City water and nat.
'n
Snyder·FOR SALE by owner, 2 story
homes go with sa le.
Corbl
gas. A good b'fl at 523,500.
brick house at 452 First Ave. 7
rooms. 2 balhs, gas hot air
A. Wood:~~~ ~d. .
115 A. FARM NEAR RIO - 85
,
furnace .
Present 95
A . tillable, lronts on 2 rds ., 9
92. 5 A. Pleasant Hill Rd .
arrangement 2 apart111ents. 40 A. Near Rio Grande.
r m. home, 50x20 barn . Bu y
Furniture
Easily conver ted to one
wi th or without equipment.
family dwelling . Asking 49 A. King Rd . $16.500.
$30,000 shown
by ap · 163 A. Ward Rd .• vacant land.
LOOKING FOR A LOT?
Financing available.
pointment.
446·0208.
WE HAVE lo ts and vacant
302·1.
30 A. Bidwell ; good house.
ground in different parts · of
----~--ANY HR. 446·1HI
the counly. Most of them can
be financed .
RANNY BLACKBURN
PiECE ·OF
BRANCH MANAGER
CHOPIN 5 UI'TA!!'&gt;LE
NEW: Serta and Bemco mal ·
tress and box springs. Large
AT C':NNEI':TIME.

at

Wanted

Wanteo To Buy

For Sale

STROUT
REALTY

World's Largest

'I'

RUSSELL

WOOD

REALTOR
"446-1066

'I'

Really, 32 State Sl
tel. 446,199.8

- ----For Sale

AT SPECIAL
LOWER PRICES

-=-------

-------

~WJlOO®~rn; lkJ k~•w".J-'
unscramble these four Jumbles,
nne ,letter lo each square, to

form four ordinary words.
Oli.~IJ-.'

~,.,

...

..,,".. .... ........ .
·~

,,'

&amp;

.

~1\St:lf
-

,., ..,._~Ill ;

For Sale

IJIO.U.IIU

r_,.,.,

I

(Amwl:'n )lorul•.•')

j..,.W.... WALTJ:

$TOKI

THIITT

rtllAI

'

selection In stock - twin, full,

IF YOU are building a new
home or remOdelif!Q , see us.
We are builders . Distributor
for Hotpolnt Applian ces.
Allison Electric.
154·tf

q11een size. Save up to $40 a
set .
"5 Second Avenue
446·1172 .
276·tf

CHAMPIONSHIP
YORK .
SH IRE
TERRIER ,
FEMALE. 7 WEEKS, $200.
446·0548.
299·4

1971 KAWASAKI250, for $525 or
will trade for car of equal
value. Also bass guitar and
amp. Phone 367.7120 after 4,
297·6

--~--

NOTIQ
We sell anythint for
anybody . Bring your
IIams to knoHs Community Auction Barn.
Corner Third &amp; Olive.
.For appointment Clll
446 ·2917 . Sola avery
S.lolrdloy evening at 7

•••

.

.~ervices

Offered

·-- · ·

DEAD $JOCK.

SANTA SPE(:IAL
•
COUNTRY BRICK
$5.QO service Charge
OUR newest home will be ready 1
Will remove your dOlld ,
for you in time lor (:hrlstmas.
horse and cows
This is a cuslom bu111 large •
Calf Jackson 286-4531 .
brick ranch home located In
the counlry on a fenced acre
lol. There are three huge
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
bedrooms. Exira closets. Two
complete baths. Large living FREE lnspecllon . Call (46 · 32~5.
Merrill O'Dell• Operator by
room with wood burning
Exferminal Termite Service,
fireplace flanked on each side
19
Belmont Dr.
by bookshelves . Custom
26J.If
kitchen with · 32' of cabinels,
dishwasher . Family room, 2
Cenir,t Air Conditioning
car garage, carpet, hardwood
&amp; Heating
floors . Cenlral heat and air.
Free Estimates
Call now and catch one of !he
Stewart's Hardware
~usy sales people on the go at
Vinton, Ohio
. RANCHO.
144·1f
RANCHO REALTORS
" HOT. SHOT" Washmoblle .
Jay Sheppard, 446·0001
Wash , wax and degreaslng
Denver K. Hig'tey, 446-0002
with mobile unit. 446·4441 .
Wanda S. Eshenaur, 446·0003
210·11

' l.'i -C---------""

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star Rl ., Gallipolis
Ph. 379·2133
243·11

QUO RIVER
Realty

BOB
LAlliE 'S
complete
Bookkeeping and Tax Ser·
L UXURIOUS BARGAIN Beauliful one floor home with , vi.ce , 42.4\f; Fourth Ave.,
Kanauga. Business by ap·
electric ~ea t an'd central air,
pointment, Ph. 446-1049.
· huge kitchen with built· ln
Please call after 6 p.m.
ca binets and range, ceramic
278.11
bath with shOwer, all rooms
except kitchen and bath are
BANKS TREE. SERVICE
carpeted. Only 10 minutes
FREE estimates, liability Infrom (fly Park ..
surance. Pruning, trimming
and .cavity work, free and
MONEY MAKER - Two story
slump removal . Ph . 446·4953.
house in fown is now two
]J.tf
apartments. Each suifable for
new lyweds or single person.
Close to everything. Needs KANAUGA Concrele Supply
Company, Ready mix con·
s~me r edecorating to be a
crete, 446·1142.
ftr st
class
apar1ment
building.
251·11
TWO HOU SES IN THURMAN
- Either house is a good buy.
Large lots, both two story
with basement , room fo;
expansion . Both are bargains
at the low asking price.
Oscar Baird
Doug Wetherholl
Brokers
Steven Betz, Salesman
446-3434
.. -

WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
AUCJIONEER

PH. 4t&amp;o3444

·Man dies

Deputy sheriff Robert Ubi
said Kauffer, who was
traveling alone, was pinned In
the car for approxlniately a
half hour. Deputy Ubi and
special depqty Fred Taylor,
among the first to reach the the
scene, worked to free the in.
jured man, who apparenUy
was alive at the Ume, but dead
on arrival 'at the hospital:
Deputy· Uhl said the other
,
driver had not been deterPT. PLEASANT -An Apple mined but ,it was believed to
Grove man was killed and haVebeen Richardson.
three others of the same area
Willis' J ones, 63, of cown1
were Injured In a head.()n bus, Ohio, was admitted to
collision about 3 a.m. Saturday Pleasant Valley Hilspltal with
on State Route 2, near the che.i l injuries received in a
Goodyear Tire and Rubber single car mishap at 9:26 p.m.
Company plant, and one person Friday. He was reported in
was injured in a separate "fair" condition Saturday.
roadway a.ccident earlier.
'I'I1e accident investigated by
Tony Michael 'Kauffer, 'J:I, deputy Ubi, occurred on U. S.
Apple Grove; wai dead on ~in Henderson.
arrival at Pleasant Valley
Jerry Spencer, 21, London,
Huspital.
W. Va.,identif!ed as the driver,
Donald "Donnie" Allen was blinded by oncoming car
Payl].e, of Glenwood was lights. His vehicle hit a ditch
treated at Pleasant Valley and overturned, coming back
Hospital and then was trans- on its.wheels. In a statement to
ferred to CalleD Huntington pollee, the driver said he tried
Hospital Saturday with a head, . to avoid going into the river.
Injury. Attendants there
'Chief deputy sherHf Millard
reported he was in "serious" Halstead investigated a twocovdition.
. . vehicle wreck at ~:15 p.m. on
james R. Rich8rdson, 29, Slll,te Route 2 near · Blalne's
Ashton and James Klng;&gt;l23,•· · garag; · in Henderson. No InRoute I, Milton, were admitted juries were reported.
to the local h95Pital.
Pascal Worley, 32, Route I,
Richardson was reported in Pine Drive, Point Pleasant,
"satisfactory" cond!Uon with a was Identified as the truck
laceration of the chin. King's driver and Debra Pauley, 18,
condition was not learned, but · Gallipolis Ferry, was the other
he was being held for ob- driver.' Damages were placed
servation of a skull injury.
at $250.

in wreck

on Rt. 2

STEWA,RT Electrical Service 8.
Repair, house wiring , free
estimate. Phone 446·4561 .
211 ·11
SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and lnslalled
Russell's Plumbing, 446·4782
2'17·11

GILLENWATER'S septic tank
cleaning and rdpalr, also
house wrecking . Ph. 446·9499.
GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
Established I~ 1940.
169·11
PLUMBING - Healing &amp; Air
Conditioning. 300 Fourth Ave . 0 . P. MARTIN &amp; Son water
Ph . 446-!637.
Delivery Service.
Your
48·11
palronage will
be ap·
preclaled. Ph. 446·0463.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
2·1f
Cor. Fourth &amp; Pine
HAFFELT'S CARPETING
Phone 446-3888 or 446·4477 .
IF YOU are building a new
165·11
home or n~d new carpet,
STANDARD
r,hone Jerry Haffell, 446·1158
Plumbing &amp; Healing
or free estimates.
2 If
214Th~A~ .• - ~
187·11 DRY WALl service by con ·

Plumbing &amp; Heating

RUSSELL'S
tract. Willard Bosley, 446·
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
~954 ·
282.1f
21GalliaAve.,446·4782 . ' -·~--"''-"'------ '
."· --:------"--DEWITT' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
2 BR MOBILE home, $150 per .
Route 160al Evergreen
mo., utilities paid, on Route
Phone 446·2735
325 In Danville, Ohio. Ph. 742·
5980.
- - - - - - - - - -1-87_· 11
2'17·6

·nnr-For Rent ·

For Rent

"

4 ROOM apartment with
garage. pr ivate entrance.
Call 675-3536.
·
299·11

SLEEP ING ROOM wl!h use of
kitchen, living room, garage,
private entrance. Call 675·
3536.
27811 . FURNISHED apartment ,
~=~-:-::--::--,..---·
round floor, 4room and bath.
SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
xcellent loc;allon . No pels .
446
rates . Park Central Hotel.
· 1803·
m .lf
308.ff

We have both at

QUAIL CREEK
MOBILE
OOMMUNITY
&amp; SALES
Rodney-Cora Rd .
Rodney, Ohio '

Hours 9 a.m. to~ p.m.
Monday thru Saturday
Ph. 245·9374-245-5021
12 x 60 MOBILE home, loc;ated
In Rio Grande. 245·5267.
301 -3
:-:-::-:--=-----~

YEAR old house, 3 bedrooms, 3
miles from !own. Ph . 256·6075
between 5 and 9 p.m.
301 ·3

- - - - -.

SLEEPING rooms, weekfy
rales. free garage parking,
Libby Hotel.
24J .tf

FURNIS.HED mobile. home In
Gallipolis, 446·0338.
227·tf
--~-------

Prizes awarded

in booster drive
TUPPERs PLAINS - Cash
prizes have been awarded in
the membership contest
sponsored by the Eastern l)and
Boosters.
Receiving the a wards were
Rachel Hunter of the marching
band; Robin ·Elkins, Chester
elementary school: Keleen
Milhoan, Tuppers Plains
School, and Teresa Hannwn,
Riverview schoql. Membership
now stands at 259. The BoosterS
extended thanks to everyone
who helped with the contest
and those whQ joined the
organization as a result.

----4 ROOMS and balh , un ·

FILING DEADLINE
CLEVELAND (UPI)
Mayor and council candidates
must file petitions by 4 p.m.
Aug. 22, 1973, 40 days before the
city's Oct. 2 primary.
The deadline was annmmced
Friday by Cuyahoga County
Elections Board Director
Virgil Brown.
Mayoral candidates wUI run
as· I1Jdt!pendent.!l after voters ·
approved a charter amendment last faD to have a nonpartisan election for mayoral
candidates.
Frontrunners frO!)I the Jrimary wlll run in the general
election Nov. 6.

furnished, $95, First floor,
references, 1 child ac·
cepla ble 1 Phone 446·4416 after
5 p.m .
2'18·6

----FURNISHED Apt. parking,

GREATEST STORY EVER WRI'ITEN
THIS Is a
of a baby born in humble Surroundings, in a
distant land nearly 2,000 years ago, a baby called Jesus.
No other story compares with this, the greatest story ever
written.
This is not a new story to most Christian people, but along
with those who have not read II, a nH"eading may give renewed
interest in the birth centuries ago of this devine babe of destiny.
It may be found, authentic, simple and succinct in St. Luke,
Cbapter 2, portions of which are herewith quoted:
\.

story

central heat, two adults only,
446·0338.
248.tf

-----SLEEPING rooms for rent.
Gallla Hole! , 446·9715.
181·11

-----PILE Is soft and lofty ... color$

retain brilliance In carpets
cleaned with Blue Lustre spot
cleaning . Rent electric
shampooer $1 at Central
Supply Co.
302·6

+++

AND it came to pallS irt IIJoee days, that there went out a
decree from Caesar AugustUs, that aU the world should be taxed,
and aU went to be \BXed,everyoneintohlsolVOclty.
1 And Joseph also went up from Galllee, out of the city of
Nazareth, into Judea, unto the city of David which is called
Bethlehem, to be taxed with Mary, hl8 eSpoused wHe.
And so It was that while they were there, the days were accompll.shed that she should be delivered. And she brought forth
her first born son, and wrapped him in swaddi~ clotbes, and
laidhim.inamanger; because there was no roqm for them in the

----WELL kept carpels show the

results of regular Blue Lustre
spot cleaning . Renl electric
shampooer $1 al G. C. Murphy's lower store.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _...:302-6
SMALL house In Rio Grande. To
rent 1111 May 1. C. U. Miller,
Rio Grande Barber Shop, 245·

lm.

5535.

301·3

And there were in the same country shepherdll abiding in the
field, keeping watch over their flock by night.
And,lo1 the angel of the LDrd came upon them, and the glory
of the LDrd shone round about them: and they were sore afraid.
And the angel said unto them. Fear not: fer, behold, I bring
you good Udinga of great joy, which shaD be to all people.
For unto you is born this day, in the city of David, a Saviour,
which is Quist the Lcril.
And this shall be a sign unto you: 'Ye shall find the babe
wrapped in swaddling clothel, lying in a manger.
And suddenly there was with the BDBel a muiUtude of the
heavenly host, praising GOO, and saying:
"Glory to God in the highest, and on eartll peace, good will
toward men."

,..----~-------------~

PAY ' ONLY ONE u·TILITY
ELECTRIClfY

We furni~h Water . Stwtgt . Garbao., Collection • Ample
Parking,. lV Antenna . Wall-lo·Wall Carpeting •
Droportas - Rong" - lltfrlgorators • Air Condltlening' .
Garbage Dl.,....,ls- Dlsllwoshtrs - Heat Llmpa- Private
hiles · Swimmine Pool • r.h...,...,.,

+++

We'd like to take this opportunity to wish each and every
subscriber a Merry Chrlslmu.

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon again has
gambled the naUon's budding
good wlll with the Soviet Union
by resumption of heavy bombing In North Vietnam-and
state Department officials believe he has won.
The President has been
strongly criticized at home for
the action, taken after peace
negotiator Henry A. Klsalnger
reported a new impuse in endthe-war talks with the Communists. And the heat may
really he on when rtbe new
Congress convenes.
Blit although Soviet Comm11r
nisi Party Chief Leonid I.

w.::: ·

·.
2 BEOROOMTOWNHOUSES

llh BATHS

TARA
Fer Information CallllllrltY ' A'tt ; Ill 7JJO

vocabulary for students enrolled in the Title I reading
program at the Pomeroy Elementary School taught by Mrs.
Robert L. Jacobs. Here, 1\vo of the students examine a
greeting card replica which was created on a wall in the
classroom so that students could study reading of the holiday
greetings.

•'·

,.

'.
•, I

...,.

'IWENTY YEARS AGO, !rom the flies cllbe O.Uy Tribune
and w kly Gallil Tlmea . , . Donlld ~. 1i, G•llipolls.
sericJully injurld ID • fool faD fruD Slate street htemion
Bridp ..• Dr. fll1ulOIId Pupe lleeted pl'fllident cl Gallll County
9Jrlne Club •• ,IArrJ 8nlilllm, 14, Rt. 2, llldwell, ..,......., by
JPU1 b1ut In ._aeddent ... Rlo
polllline
mare .a, up
..t to 11-4 witb 'IS62 win over Plki!Yiew,
10U2 I'IIIIP OVIr Lte'1 ODDege and '11-41 trlumpb OYII' CUm:
btilrnd 11M •
'111111 Mpainllto up IC.'\Iflng 1--ce to
aearlJ ..... llllllt. lopiiD nall011 ... Inrnton cbnpi GAllS
. ..U 8 Ji+tu "IIU Bltit Dl!l'lll ~·

G..- !WI••

e.

Brezhnev decried the renewed
attacks on the north Thursday,
Washington officials considered his reaction a
relaUvely mild one unlikely to
close . any diplomatic doors
between the two countries.
In his speech on the 50th
anniversary of the establish·
ment of the Soviet Union,
Brezhnv told a Moscow
meeting that the future of
Soviet-American relations
"wiD depend on the course of
events In the inunediate future,
and, in particular, on the turn
in the question of ending the
war in Vietnam."
Brezhnev's statement was

Pentagon critic removed
.

.. WASHINGTON IUPI) - Gordoa Rule, a clvlllaa of,
flclal ol the N8VJ wbo bu lotig beea aa oatspokea erlllc ol
Pet11a1011 ww, b11 been realllgaed alter rd1111Dg ·1
requell lblt be retire.
' Aimotmcement of bil reallipmeal cfUIIe tbree days
Iller Rille, 1 redoltllre4, elpr-cllompbiJ former Navy
captala, pllblldy erltldud Pmldelll Nlloa's appolulmeDI
of Bey L. Alb, former preeldent.of Uttoa lnd111trles, u
director ol the Olflce ol Maiapmeat •d Badcet.
Rale baa beea director of lbe Proearemeat Control aad
Oearuee Seetloa of the Na'l')' Mloterle1 Commud, a
. . . . a year job Ia wblcb be reviewed llld often
dWlealed Navy coiiii'IICII worth
to " blllioa a
)'e8'. 'l1le Defeue Depmmeiil said Friday he bU been
reualped to be 1 eoooallaiit at lbe Navy'• Loslltle1
Mlalpmeat Sebool Ill aearby Aliacollla - elearly i
demodoil.

~

~

"lllllloD

+++
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Charles
Rogen, Point Pleasant; James
Slewa1, Weal Columbia; Mrs.
Glle Diehl, 1Gt1, Alberts; Mrs.
Jaclde llwlca, 1011, Point
Pltaant; Either &amp;Ia, Point
Ple111nt; Brenda Sharp,
HenderacM; Mn. Paul JusUce,
dqhter, Rlclne, lnd Hazel

Rouab. . . llaY,IIl•

fund enriched

MASoN - Wahama High
SChool's White Falcon Baucl.
under the direction of Gerald
Slmm0111 and Otarlel Yeago,
has been'selected by the office
of Gov. Arch A. Moore to
repiWtnt the alate of Weet
VIrginia at the Prealdel!tlal
InauguraUon Janlllr)' . 20 lD
WashiDBion, tl. C.
In order to participate, the
band must raise approximately $6,000.

inauguration

WINS SPIRIT AWARD
AKRON (UPI) - Winfield S.
Cbapman, 83, a powtt truck
driver for Goodyear Tire olt
Rubbef Co. In 1M Aneelee, hal
won the 1972 Goodtear Spirit
Awatd,
The a111rd II pr mled an·
nually to the Goodyear em,
ploye who comblnea an
"out&amp;andlng work record wlth
qulltanding COilllilunlty eer•
vice."
Chapman was presented
wJth $1,000 and a bronze
medallion in ceremonlea here
Friday.

THE CHRISTMAS HOUDAY season has provided·&amp;new

.Xfl. :.:.a •••.•.•.•.n.c.~\l.l!'W.«':;:;;w-,;:;;;:::ru.&gt;#.o::;;:w.m:r.=

-

Children's TV .

Band invited to

GALLI''OLIS
The at the new medical center,
. impre5sive sum of $187.50 was supplied by Wells Television,
presented to the · Holzer rent for $1.80 per day including
Medical Center Pediatric tax. However, WeDs agreed to
TeleviSion Fund as net profit · reduce the rental price to 2S
from the Gillian Moore · cents per day lor the 14 sets In
Christmas Variety Show at the pectlatric unit. This totals
Washington School Auditorium $106 per month,
Saturday evening, Dec. 9. 'l'hls
Mrs. Gillian Moore, em·
special ftind provides free played by the French Art
television for the children who Colony at Riverby as an Jn.
are palients in the pediatric slructor in dance, plsnned,
unit at Holzer Medical Center. coordinated and produced the
As a result of this donallon, Chr.isimas Variety Show with
combined with the $25 con- . her students performing
tribut!on from Thomas specifically for the pediatric
Clothiers, Gallipolis, free TV is television fund . Assisting MM!.
assured for children at Holzer Moore were Mrs. Tom Rieser
Medical Center through and Mrs. Anne Fischer, both of
February, 1974.
Gall(polls, and Merlyn Rosa of
To complete the year 1973, a Rio Grande College.
check for $106 was received
Individuals, bualnesses or
from Bob Evana Farms, which organizations wishing to
pays for December, 1973,
donate to the ·pediatric
Sixteen businesses and four Mevls!on fund may do ao by
civic and social organ!zaUons contacting Earl Neff; Teodora
contributed to the pedwtr!c Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631.
television fund to cjate. TV sei.R

bluffing another pot ·

APARTMENT for construction 2 BEDROOM trailer 50 x 10,
Cheshire, Ohio, good location,
men . Ph . 446·0756.
references
. Call 36J.7309.
267·11
2'18·11

Looking for a mobile home
lot or a qua lily mobile home?

AT ABLE; FULL OF STUFFED FIGURES signilicant to the Christmas season has been
used at the Pomeroy Elementary School's Title I r~adlng progrtun classroom to teach the
yOitqgsters enrolled words associated with the holiday season. Here a student examines a
stuffed reindeer. one of the many items collected by the teacher, Mrs, Jacobs, for the study.

White House gambler

-:-::-:----:-----

A.UCTION
SERVIa

"SELL .THE AUCTION

ONE KILLED IN CRASH ~ Mason County Sberiff's
Deputies Robert Ubi and Fred Taylor investigate ilie
wreckage of the auto in which Tony Michael Kauffer, Apple
Grove, was killed.- PHOTO B'tsAM NICHOI.S IJ.

VARIETY PROCEEDS BENE;FIT CHILDREN - Mrs. 1'lxn Rieser, Earl Neff, Mrs.
Gillian Moore, l tor, with Neff holding show prooeeds. Neff Is on the Holzer Medical Center
Vohmteer Service League Conununity Steering Committee in charge of the Cbilclren's TV fund.

Veteran~ Memorial HDOpltal

ADMITTED
Kevin
Barton, Reedsville; Patricia
Cleland, Langsville: Nara
Hartman, Long Bottom.
DISCHARGED
Ava
Gilkey, Orville Gaul, Holly
McCoy, Edith McCoy, Ruth
Carr, Sue Seelig.

.

DOC
SMITH
SAYS

1972 BUICK

cars must go by January
1st!!!

ELECTRA

Electra 2 dr. hdtp., custom, air
cond ., AM-FM, power windows
&amp; seat. Demonstrator, 8.300
miles.

'4995

peppered with denunciations of
the bombing campaign, described as ''the new American
imperialist crimes in Viet·

1972

narn."
State
Department
specialists, after preliminary
scrutiny of Brezhnev's
remarks , noted that the
Communist chief announced rio
drastic actions which could
affect the cooperation consolidated at the Moscow sum.mit meeting wltb Nixon In
May.
'"lbey at&gt;pear still to want to
continue on the course set at
the Moscow summit, although
as long as the problem in
Vietnam exists, it doesn't help
the atmosphere," one official
said.
·
From this assessment, the
situation appeared much the
same as on May 8 when the
President ordered the mining
of North Vielnamese harbors,
yet Will! still able to pull off ~·
Moscow swnmlt meeting.
Similarly, U.S. officials did
not swear particularly dis·
turbed by Commllnist Cbinese
denunciations of the intensive
U.S. bombing raids.
The Flori~ White House
said Friday the President
would keep the bombing in
effect unUI the Communists
agree to an acceptable peace
plan-but left open the
possibility of a temporary halt
during (bristmas.
While the Nixon admlnlstraUon appeared basically unmoved by worldwide protest
against the U.S. bombing
raids, the State Department
aald ll'Oiiminary expreuio..
of regret had been. extended to
the Egyptian and Pollah
governments. American
bomling apparently damaged
I I'!Jllllh freighter In Hlipbonl
harbor and llruck the EDPtian rnlulon·ln Hanoi.

END-OF-TttE YEAR USED
CAR CLEARANCE! All

CHEVROLET

Blazer, 4 wheel drive, 4 speed,
350 eng., 13,000 miles. Never
been off hard road.

•3795

1972 PONTIAC

1972 PONTIAC
-

Gran Prix, red, white vlpyl top,
white bucket seats, 3,200·mlles.

'4195

1972 BUICK
Skyjark 4 dr ., air cond. Orie
owner, Jlke new.

•3295

1972

CHEVELLE

Ventura II. air cond., red. black
vinyl top. Sprint package,
12,000 miles. Sharp,

2 Dr. ~dip., auto., p. steering,
vinyl top. sharp.

•2995

'2M5

1970 MUSTANG

1970 BUICK

cyl., auto. lri!ns., vinyl top,
extra nice.

6

'1895
1968

CHEVELLE

2 Or. hdlp., 307 engine, auto.,
P.S., low miles. Two to choose
from ,

'1595

Skylark 2 Dr. hdtp., air cond. ·
vinyl top, one owner. Extra
nice .

'2595

1972 OPEL
St. Wgn., 4 speed, 13,000 miles,
Iight blue, worfh more.

'1995

�22 - ',he Sunday Times- Sentihel, Sunday, Dec. 24, 1972

.

'

.For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memory
WE

Real Estate For Sale

Help Wanted

THE family

of

Homer

sent floWers and food , all the

help and kindness fro m
friends and neighbors. M rs .
Homer Johnson. all hl.s
chil dren. mother, brofhers

and sisters .

302·1

IN MEMORY of Oscar Spires

who passed away December
25. 1958. Many lonely years

yave passed since God called
you home. Your sweet
memories still lin ger in my
hearlforever . Wife , chi ldren.
granqc;hildren.
302·1
IN MEMORY of my father .
Elgan Sealey, Who passed
away December 25, 1938.
Just a cluster of beautiful

memorieS
Sprayed with a million tears;
Wish you -could ha ve spared

him, God, .

·

For just a few more years.
Daughter, Nina S. Burks.
302· 1

- - - - ' - ' -- - ' A CHR ISTMAS memory. of our
husband and father, William
C. Boar'd, who passed away
Oct. 1. 1911.. ll)s lust a cluster
of memories, sprayed with a
million tears. Wishing God
could have spared you for
many, many more year s. To
some you may be forgotten, to
some a part of the past, Jo us
who loved you. losf, your,
Your memories will alWays
last. Sadly missed by wife,
son, daughter and grand chil dren .
302· 1

Notice
RUSS'S Glass Service. Glass for
all needs, We sell windshields ,
storm windows and doors,
awn lngs and mlrrors . 704
Pine St., Rio Grande, 245·5048.
295·11

-------

TWO·WAY Radios Sales &amp;
Service. New and used CB 's,

police monqors,

ant~nnas,

et c. Bob ' s Cilizens Band
Radio Equip ., Georges Creek
Rd ., Gallipolis, Ohio 446·4517.
212·11

- - ----RALPH'S Carpet &amp; Upholstery

Cleaning
Service . Free
estimates. Ph . 446·0294. Ralph
A. Davis, oWner.
9·11

- - -- - - - -

ROOFING and gutler work .
William Mitchell, 388.8507.
67-lf

DAY CARE
SU N VALLEY Nursery School ,
I icensed by Slate of Ohio, l'h
miles west ot new hospital .
577 Sun Valley Dr . Ph. 446·
3657. Day care thai says "we
care." Madge Hauldren ,
Owner; Loredith &amp; John
Hauldren, Operators.
114·11

---,---'--- - -

GOT a Junk f'roblem? We pick
up junk car bodies and buy
scrap iron and metaL 3888583.
297·12

Wanted To Do
ROOFING and spouting, ex·
perienced roofers. Ph. 388·
8114, James Marcum .
295·30

----"---

TOOL shar pen i ng ,
saws ,
scissors, shears, home and
garden tools . Sharp Shop.
Alley rear 147 Second.
216·11

=--:-:--REMODELING, · building new

rooms , cement. roofing,
sidi ng, furnace Ins. J . H.
Queen &amp; Son, 446·9271.
68·11

----NEED a Santa? Phone 675·1954.

2'16·7

Help Wanted
SALESMAN
A large nationally known
company has opportunities
for a person interested In a
sales career in the food Industry . Initial ossignmenl
will be to service retail and
institutional accounts .
Prefer college graduate with
business
administration
major.
Will
consider
minimum 2 year academic
work towards a business
degree.
E•cellent
promotional 'opportunities .
Top ·fringe benefils. To ex.
ptore this challenging OP·
portunity
please · send
resume including academic
background,
work
ex·
perience, and ul.ary history
in confidence to BoJt 244, c-o
Daily Tribune. Equal op.
porlunity employer.

.

·liJilOJUWIL

Baker cook for day shill,
experience helpful but not
necessary, also waitress, 10
p.m. to 6 a.m. shift. · Good
working condHior1 . Paid
vacation. Apply in person
only a1· Bob Evans Stl[!!ak
House.

Johnson w9uld like to express

our heartfell thanks to Dr .
· Kemp, the nurses , Rev .
· Patterson. Miller's Honw for
Funerals, all the people who

Real Estate For Sale

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

THE ,

WISEMAN
.

REALTY

'

AGENCY

25 Locust st:
Howard Brannon, ·Broker
Off. 446·2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve. 446·1226 or 446·2674

SEMf.DRIVERS NEEDED
LOCAL companies need Certified Sem i- Drivers . Earn
S300·5400 per week. No ex.
perienCe . necessary. will
train . For application cal l 317·
636-2675, or write Coastway
American Sys tems. P. 0 . Box
11125; Indianapolis, Indiana
46201.
298·30

Real Estate For Sale

WISHES YOU, A·

MERRY CHRISTMAS

CHRISTMAS TIME, 1972
CHR ISTMAS means a tot of
And wo~ld also like to thank each and every
things . TQ each of us here
person tn the area for helping us have our
Brannon Realty, Christma s
most successful year. We broke all the rei!l
also means three of the ,best
things in .life : good heallh •.
estate records ever set in. Gallia County.
good home and good friends.
When we look back over the
3 Bedroom Home
years and th ink of Christmas
Ideal Business
days gone by, we can sti ll
SOLD-SOLD-SOLD
MIDDLE: AGED lady to live In
Location
pause
and
thank
God
for
our
and care for elder ly lady on
many blessings tha t have
VERY NICE 3 BEDROOM
WE HAVE BROKEN ALL
weekends. Call after 5 446·
HOME
WITH CARPE TED
come
our
way
.
So,
we
think
of
REAL ESTATE S.&lt;.LES
oan,
LIVING AND
DINING
RECORDS TH IS YR . BY A
you at this firne of yea r . We
302·6
ROOM . FULL BASEMENT ,
HUGE MARGIN . YOU
hope this wi ll be a truly fhrry
CENTRAL AIR, GARAGE
GUES SED IT - WE NEED
Christmas for you and
AN D LARGE LOT . AB ·
LISTINGS LIKE NEVER
everyone at your house, and
SOL UTELY ONE OF THE
BeFORE . If YOU'RE
that the New Year will bless
BEST
BUSINESS
THINKING OF SELL ING
TELEPHONE
answering_
your home with all of the good
LOCAT I ONS . BETWEEN
CALL US FOR THE BE ST
GAL L IPOLIS AND PO INT
device. C. U. Miller at Rio
things In life.
RESULTS POSSIBLE .
PLEASANT
FOR THE
NEW l,tSTING
Grande, 245·5,535 Barber
MONEY . PERFE CT FOR
May the happjtte88 of
HERE is the place you have
Shop.
3 Be~room Home
IN SU R A NCE OFFICE,
302·3
been
looking
tor
at
the
price
BEAUTY SHOP . SERVICE
friendships be re·
. yoU can afforc;L 44 acres
10 YR . OLD 3 BEDROOM
STA TION . PLENTY OF
JUNK autos and scra p metal .
located on Lincoln Pike just 10
kindled thu Christm••·
HOME WITH GARAGE
ROO M FOR 20 R 3 MOBI LE
AND FLAT LO T IN TOWN .
388·8776.
mi. from Gallipolis. 10 acres
HOMES . YOU WON'T FIND
GO T TO SEE THIS QUICK .
A BETTER BUY .
. 245-78
bottom land, fair fence, farm
1T WON ' T LAS T LONG .
pond, . creek, and good well.
Brand New
WANTED to buy, sell or trade,
Large bar n, extra good,
toy electric tra in, 446-4843.
Large Rustic Lodge
tobacco base. 1967 mobile
3 Bedroom
240·11
home in good condition . A
With 7 Acres
BEAUTIFUL ·. COU N TRY
good small cattle farm, all for
LOCAT ION 6 M IL ES OUT
ONE OF THE PRETTIEST
only $10,500.
IN
ClfY
SC HOOL
LOCA TIONS IN GALLIA
DISTR I CT.
3
NICE
REDWOOD RANCHER
CO. OVERLOOKING A
BEDROOMS, BEAUTIFUL
THREE bedroom, large ' eal·i n
FAL LS IN RACCOON CK .
KITC HEN AND HUGE LOT .
Need Another Bldg.?
kitchen,, cat hedral ce iling in
TH E OLD SWI MMING
IT'S YOURS FOR 122.900.00.
Jay Sheppard 446·0001
SEE our aluminum bldgs .
the spacious living room with
HOLE IS IN THE FRONT
Denver K, Higley 446·00!1211'
, Heavy duly, wit~ flooring ,
fireplace and deep pile ca r Very Good Buy
YAR D . 3 TO 5 HUGE
wired for electric. Also West
pet, large file bath, plenty
BEDROO M S,
FULL
For Bargain
Virgi nia chunk coal. drain
c lose ts , two car oa rport,
BASEME NT,
2 . FIRE
Hunter
PLACES. MODERN KIT .
tile. bell file, cement and
double slorage room , well
CHEN . JUST A PERFECT
morlar . Galli polis Block &amp;
landscaped lawn accenled by
LARGE 7 YR. OLD 3
SPOT .
Coal Co., 123'h Pine, 446·2783.
a hand hewn redwood fence .
BEDROOM
H6ME
207·11
16 ACRES
EVERYTHING MODERN ; .
Outstanding Brick
FU LL BASEMENT AND
ALL ELECTRIC hom e--. 19'x24'
GARAGE
ON
FL
AT
LOT
IN
NewGMC
LR with fireplace , beaut.iful
J
BED ROO M S WITI-I
CIT Y SCHOOL DI STRICT . 2
Truck Headquarters
LOVELY APOINTMENTS
kitchen with range and ref . 112
MILES FROM
TOWN .
T HR OUG HOUT.
V-ERY
1966 'h Ton GMC Pickup
basement, large 30'x60'
PR I CED UNDER $24,000.
PRETTY
K IT CHEN
&amp;
1969 Olds 88
.
building, well slacked pond.
YOU WON 'T F IND THIS
FAM
IL
Y
ROOM
AREA
.
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
IN TOWN
LARGE AND WELL ·BUILT
CARPET, 11/2 BATH AND
1971 3 !on Chevrolet Truck
3 BR, spa cious paneled and
liOME ANYW H ERE ELSE
FLA T LOT . S33.500.00.
THE .LEADER SINCE 1900 IN · carpeted LR. eat.in kilchen,
FOR TH IS MONEY .
1970 'h ton Ford XL T Pickup
SERVING THE NATION ' S
1970 '12 ton Chevrolet Pickup
aluminum siding , 17'x30'
BUYERS
&amp; SELLERS.
Owner Anxious
1969 '12 ton Chevrolet Pickup
garage and workshop $13.000.
Ph. 446-0008
1969 International 1600
4 BR
To Sell
GALL lA CO.'S LARGEH
1969 3 ton GMG
LARGE two story , aluminum
REAL ESTATE
VERY CLEA N WEL L KEPT
siding and stone, all buill-i n
1967 °/o T. Chev. PU
NEW LISTING - One of th e
SALES
AGE·NCY
3
BEDROOM
HOME
.
IT
'S
6
kitchen, formal OR. laundry
1968 1/2 T. GMC PU
largest modern homes on the
0 FF ICE 446-3643
YRS. OLD BU T LOOK S
1
room, garage, l'h lot. quick
1968 h T. GMC PU
market. Thi s 3 BR beauty
EVENINGS CALL
LIKE
NEW ,
LOVELY
possession. S18,800.
New 11 fl . camper
offers a modern eaf.fn kif ·
E. M. " IKE " WISEMAN
KITCHEN, NICE L A ND ·
2 STORY
.
1964 '12 T. GMC PU
chen. dini ng rm .• 15x22 LR
446·3796
SC APED LOT IN GOOD
E. N. WISEMAN 446·4500
NEIGHBORHOOO
ON
1966 1/2 T. Ford PU
with a stone firep lace, 2 FOUR BR, lwo bath, fam ily
EDGE OF TOWN .
room , all electric kitchen ,
1967 1 T. GMC Dump
balhs, cent. air, full basement
DR , fireplace in LR, la undry,
1969 112 T. GMC PU
with finished den, 2 car
workshop , copper plumbing .
1968
T. GMC PU
garage and a 100 ft . lot in
1960 1 Ton Ford flat.
Gallipolis Twp .
519.500.
1967 112 T. GMC Pickup
ONE-THIRD ACRE LOT
MASSIE
1964 CO 1600 International truck THI S NEARLY NEW 3 BR 7 ROOMS, 3 BR, 2 bath, luxury
· kitchen, ca rport, workshop, in
1967 '/ 2 T. GMC PU
brick offers gnd livi ng with
Addison Twp.
1966 '¥• T. GMC PU
l'h baths, 1/\' ~rpet, cent.
LOTS
1967 v, T. GMC Ptckup
air, dream ~
"· double
1968 1h T. GMC Pickup
garage and pair,
••ner has PRICED from $1,600 l o SJ,OOO.
Call for more lnformallon .
1967
T. GMC Pickup
been tr ansterrt ~ nd Is
WE HAVE BUYERS
anxious to sell.
SOMMERS G.M.C.
NEAR CLAY Sc. _ • Bdr'!JlS.,
TRUCKS, INC.
FOR properlles In all are~~ · We
ttv. f m . '13~ x 2a· '~llh"'F:P.:
133 Pine St.
need 3 and 4 BR homes in
ADDISON - Lovely 3 BR home
formal di n . rm .•. modern
446·2532
Gallipolis and near town . Plus
wilh brick front. carport,
kitchen, H.W. floors, walnut
- we need farms and small
267·11 utility rm ., and cent. air . E· Z
trim , full base . and dry. Gar.
acreage. Co !I Brannon Realty 11 0 TH IRD Avenue . 6 room
---------financing on $21.000.
20'x20' (block), 'h A. lot with
'
frame
cottage,
1
(loor
plan
,
any time.
GOO D CLEAN LUMP and
plenty shrubbery. This house
air·cond itioning ,
car peting
sloker coal. Carl Winters Rio LAND TO I t';." I.OP -1 2 acre
also 2 outbui ldings. Use of
has quality hard to find In
parce l a-,VV-{..1\ 'imits an d NEW 3 bed room home, natural
Grande. Phone 245·5115.'
today 's. co nstruction . Only.
alley In back .
6·11 ha s frontage • . V Jfe rd.
$27.500.
gas,
city
wa t er ,
full
basement, with garage •. part NICE neighborhood. close to
SINGER Sewing Machine Sales LIKE CITY LIVING? We have4
Bir ch front, $16,800, Plants
schools 6 rooms with part SPRING VALLEY- Bi· Level,
homes in town priced from
&amp; Service. All niodets In
3 large bdrms. with deep and
Sub-division . Call Delbert
basement.
air condlti'onlng,
stock. Free delivery. Serv ice $7,000 lo $15,000.
wide c losets, all factory
Clark , 446·0390.
ca rp eting , 1 car' _garage In
guaranteed. Models priced
kllchen with dishwasher and
278·26
basement . Va cant, ready for
113
from 569.95. French City L.o . C.A·T· I-O· N
disposal. Large l iv. rm . wllh
immediate
occupancy
.
SECO ND AVE. Elderly 2
Fabri c Shoppe, Si nger ap.
carpet, large re c. rm . with
story mansion could be used BY OWNER. 3 BR home, 2
proved dealer, 58 Court St .•
carpet and bar. 2 car gar.
9
AC
RE
S
2
miles
from
Rio
baths . exce ll ent conditio n,
as a 3, 4 or 5 BR home. Dining
Ph . 446·9255.
with elec . dr. This house has
Gr ande, S3,500.
close to town. Must sell, pr ice
rm. and family rm . each ha ve
308·11
cen . air, is only 4 yrs . old, well
r educed, $12. 900. 446·4782.
fireplaces. New cabinets in
:::-~~~-constructed and located on a
kitchen,
,
1112
baths,
garage,
286·23 NEW ranch style house on
TY PEWRITER S.
Smit h.
large tot.
1
Route 35. l r1 baths, car peting
pallo and part basement.
Corona, Royal, Olivell! ,
with garage. Lot size 70X170.
Don ' t wall too long to see tt.ls
Underwood , manual an d
VINTON - 7 rms . and bath,
one,
be
cause
it
probably
electric. Simmons Printing
carpeted, ha s alum. siding,
FIVE
room
doll
house
com
won' t be o.n the market long.
and Office Equipment.
storm drs. and windows, new
pl etely remodeled, beam
235·11
roof and clly water . Located
ce
il
i
ng,
ca
rpeted,
full
CHARMING HOME of bri ck
on 1.25 A. good garden land ;
basemen t , storm doors and
and frame construction Is just
PI PE S, Pipes, Pipes, GBD,
has berries, grapes, pear,
wi
ndows,
one
car
garag
e.
for you . Formal dining rm., 2
Cheratan, BBB. Jobey, Hilson
NEW &amp; USEI:t
cherry
and apple trees. Only
Priced $15, 000.
fireplace s, paneled den, I· BEAMS , Channel, angle,
and others. Tawney' s Pipe
$14,000.
Office
446-1066
garage and sc reened porch
and Trophy House. 422 Second
sheet and plate steel, rounds ,
Evenings
are only a few of the many
Ave.
NEAR K.C. H. Sc. - Beautiful
flals , reinforcing bars and
Ron
Canaday
446-3636
highlights of this atlracllve
199·tf
Colonia l, 8 big rms .. 3 baths,
mesh, rail, pipe, cu lverts and
Russell Wood 446-4618
hillside home.
all carpeted, full finished
, equipment. Prompt drill ing,
WELL kept carpels show the
base., $15 per mo.• Nal. gas
Ne iman Co .. Nelson vi ll e,
results of reg ular Blue Lustre LIVE 8. COLLECT RENT. 2
Ohio, P,O. Box 2'/8, Ph. 753.
heat. Loc;aled on a 3 A . lot.
brand new mobile homes on aspot cleaning . Rent electric
1554. Call coll ect.
Also has a metal barn 30'x60'
Neal Realty
fla t lot 2 mi. from new
shampooer Sl al Centra l
and storage bldg. Asking
181·11
hospital. Only $13,900.
Supply Co.
$40,000.
LOT 67' x 112' located at 54
284·11
'
Terr ie r ,
Ml DDL EPORT- Lovely 6 rm . MANCHESTER
Gar fi eld Avenue. $1,000.
GARFIEL D AVE . Extra
modern home with 3 BR,
standard and loy puppies.
LOST bright car pel colors ...
nice, 5 rooms on first floor ,
Albany , Ohio. Phone 698-2571.
buill-in k itchen. 7 fireplaces
res1ore th em with Blue
NEW LISTING
wllh rec . rm . and cooking
PLUS
4
renlal
unils
renting
300·3 3 BE DR OOM home al 1809
Luslre .
Rent
electric
facilities In base. This house
for $555 per month .
sham pooer $1 al G. C. Murphy
Ches tnut Street. Jus t recently
has all new carpel, tile
3 AKC Brittany Spaniel puppies,
Lower Store .
painted inside and out. Carpet
ceilings , paneling,
and
1 AKC German shortha ir, 2
284·11 LIKE NEW - 1970 SCH ULT 12
in living r oom and three
awnings on wi ndows. Located
x 64. This is a real bargai n for
coon dogs. Phone 256· 1366.
bcdrr1on1 s. Would make a
on a .4 A. lot wilh plenty nice
Mobile home lovers. This
300-3
gr ()d inves tm enJ .
shrubbery . Lot is 42'x410' and
'73 K IRKWOOD mobile home,
home Is compleloly furnished
Office Phone 446·1694
goes to !he r iver. Gar. 20'x24'
t 4 x 65. all electric, $7.500.
and for on ly $10,500, you also M A T C H I N G
deIuxe
Evenings
plus a new mefal bldg . Price
Phone 446-4930. Ask for VIck ie
get cent. air, WW carpet,
Wes tinghou se washe r and
Charles M. Neal 446·1546
$23,000.
after 6 p.m. 245·5008.
was her, dr yer, patio and
dry~r . Phone 446·3507.
J. Michael Neal 446-1503
2'18·6
cellar . To lop it oft, you get _
300·3
NEIGHBORHOOD RD.
300 fl. !rootage on Route 160.
NEW
BRICK
HOME
Secllon, 24' x 55', same as
ALL TYPES of bui ld ing
. 3 GE NTLE ponies, 2 gentl e 3 LARGE bedrooms all electric
new,
double lavoratory bath
materials, bloc;k, brick, sewer MIDDLEPORT - ELEGANT 2
~fsfs . Call 388·9991 or 388.
with ce ntral air, carpellng,
wi fh shower. Lot 85' x 125'.
pipes, windows, lintels, eoc.
stor y brick contains 12 rms .
paneli ng In k lichen and
$14,500.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
This Is !he home of the late
300·6
family
room
,
lVl bath, utility
0 . Phone 245·5121 after 5.
Dr . Cluff and can be bough!
room, factory k.itchen with RODNEY 1972 Schultz
12J.tf
PALOMINO horse, very 9enlle.
tar below replacement .
range , di shw asher and
Mobil e home, 14' x ill', all
Call 388·9991 after 4 o clock .
disposa l, 2 ca r garage wlfh
elec. cen. air and located on
INVESTME NT - Look ing for a
300·6 . electric opener. Slate en .89 A. lot. Pri ce $14,900.
store building? Well, we have
fra nc e, oak trim with birch
one In Vinton with 2 apart· AKC Toy Poodl es 8. Pekinges~s.
94doors. 112 mile from new CENTENARY - Good 3 or 4
Phone 256·6553.
·
men ts upstairs. 2400 sq. ft. on
hospital on large level lot.
bdrm . Ranch . It has H.W.
each floor. $15,000.
300·3
floors wllh carpet in llv. rm.
Phone: 446·1079 or 446·1854.
293.ff
and hall. Some paneling .
CHESH IR E
TRA I LER
Large kilchen with plenty
PARK - 19 stall s, 7 mobile
cabinets.
City water and nat.
'n
Snyder·FOR SALE by owner, 2 story
homes go with sa le.
Corbl
gas. A good b'fl at 523,500.
brick house at 452 First Ave. 7
rooms. 2 balhs, gas hot air
A. Wood:~~~ ~d. .
115 A. FARM NEAR RIO - 85
,
furnace .
Present 95
A . tillable, lronts on 2 rds ., 9
92. 5 A. Pleasant Hill Rd .
arrangement 2 apart111ents. 40 A. Near Rio Grande.
r m. home, 50x20 barn . Bu y
Furniture
Easily conver ted to one
wi th or without equipment.
family dwelling . Asking 49 A. King Rd . $16.500.
$30,000 shown
by ap · 163 A. Ward Rd .• vacant land.
LOOKING FOR A LOT?
Financing available.
pointment.
446·0208.
WE HAVE lo ts and vacant
302·1.
30 A. Bidwell ; good house.
ground in different parts · of
----~--ANY HR. 446·1HI
the counly. Most of them can
be financed .
RANNY BLACKBURN
PiECE ·OF
BRANCH MANAGER
CHOPIN 5 UI'TA!!'&gt;LE
NEW: Serta and Bemco mal ·
tress and box springs. Large
AT C':NNEI':TIME.

at

Wanted

Wanteo To Buy

For Sale

STROUT
REALTY

World's Largest

'I'

RUSSELL

WOOD

REALTOR
"446-1066

'I'

Really, 32 State Sl
tel. 446,199.8

- ----For Sale

AT SPECIAL
LOWER PRICES

-=-------

-------

~WJlOO®~rn; lkJ k~•w".J-'
unscramble these four Jumbles,
nne ,letter lo each square, to

form four ordinary words.
Oli.~IJ-.'

~,.,

...

..,,".. .... ........ .
·~

,,'

&amp;

.

~1\St:lf
-

,., ..,._~Ill ;

For Sale

IJIO.U.IIU

r_,.,.,

I

(Amwl:'n )lorul•.•')

j..,.W.... WALTJ:

$TOKI

THIITT

rtllAI

'

selection In stock - twin, full,

IF YOU are building a new
home or remOdelif!Q , see us.
We are builders . Distributor
for Hotpolnt Applian ces.
Allison Electric.
154·tf

q11een size. Save up to $40 a
set .
"5 Second Avenue
446·1172 .
276·tf

CHAMPIONSHIP
YORK .
SH IRE
TERRIER ,
FEMALE. 7 WEEKS, $200.
446·0548.
299·4

1971 KAWASAKI250, for $525 or
will trade for car of equal
value. Also bass guitar and
amp. Phone 367.7120 after 4,
297·6

--~--

NOTIQ
We sell anythint for
anybody . Bring your
IIams to knoHs Community Auction Barn.
Corner Third &amp; Olive.
.For appointment Clll
446 ·2917 . Sola avery
S.lolrdloy evening at 7

•••

.

.~ervices

Offered

·-- · ·

DEAD $JOCK.

SANTA SPE(:IAL
•
COUNTRY BRICK
$5.QO service Charge
OUR newest home will be ready 1
Will remove your dOlld ,
for you in time lor (:hrlstmas.
horse and cows
This is a cuslom bu111 large •
Calf Jackson 286-4531 .
brick ranch home located In
the counlry on a fenced acre
lol. There are three huge
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
bedrooms. Exira closets. Two
complete baths. Large living FREE lnspecllon . Call (46 · 32~5.
Merrill O'Dell• Operator by
room with wood burning
Exferminal Termite Service,
fireplace flanked on each side
19
Belmont Dr.
by bookshelves . Custom
26J.If
kitchen with · 32' of cabinels,
dishwasher . Family room, 2
Cenir,t Air Conditioning
car garage, carpet, hardwood
&amp; Heating
floors . Cenlral heat and air.
Free Estimates
Call now and catch one of !he
Stewart's Hardware
~usy sales people on the go at
Vinton, Ohio
. RANCHO.
144·1f
RANCHO REALTORS
" HOT. SHOT" Washmoblle .
Jay Sheppard, 446·0001
Wash , wax and degreaslng
Denver K. Hig'tey, 446-0002
with mobile unit. 446·4441 .
Wanda S. Eshenaur, 446·0003
210·11

' l.'i -C---------""

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star Rl ., Gallipolis
Ph. 379·2133
243·11

QUO RIVER
Realty

BOB
LAlliE 'S
complete
Bookkeeping and Tax Ser·
L UXURIOUS BARGAIN Beauliful one floor home with , vi.ce , 42.4\f; Fourth Ave.,
Kanauga. Business by ap·
electric ~ea t an'd central air,
pointment, Ph. 446-1049.
· huge kitchen with built· ln
Please call after 6 p.m.
ca binets and range, ceramic
278.11
bath with shOwer, all rooms
except kitchen and bath are
BANKS TREE. SERVICE
carpeted. Only 10 minutes
FREE estimates, liability Infrom (fly Park ..
surance. Pruning, trimming
and .cavity work, free and
MONEY MAKER - Two story
slump removal . Ph . 446·4953.
house in fown is now two
]J.tf
apartments. Each suifable for
new lyweds or single person.
Close to everything. Needs KANAUGA Concrele Supply
Company, Ready mix con·
s~me r edecorating to be a
crete, 446·1142.
ftr st
class
apar1ment
building.
251·11
TWO HOU SES IN THURMAN
- Either house is a good buy.
Large lots, both two story
with basement , room fo;
expansion . Both are bargains
at the low asking price.
Oscar Baird
Doug Wetherholl
Brokers
Steven Betz, Salesman
446-3434
.. -

WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
AUCJIONEER

PH. 4t&amp;o3444

·Man dies

Deputy sheriff Robert Ubi
said Kauffer, who was
traveling alone, was pinned In
the car for approxlniately a
half hour. Deputy Ubi and
special depqty Fred Taylor,
among the first to reach the the
scene, worked to free the in.
jured man, who apparenUy
was alive at the Ume, but dead
on arrival 'at the hospital:
Deputy· Uhl said the other
,
driver had not been deterPT. PLEASANT -An Apple mined but ,it was believed to
Grove man was killed and haVebeen Richardson.
three others of the same area
Willis' J ones, 63, of cown1
were Injured In a head.()n bus, Ohio, was admitted to
collision about 3 a.m. Saturday Pleasant Valley Hilspltal with
on State Route 2, near the che.i l injuries received in a
Goodyear Tire and Rubber single car mishap at 9:26 p.m.
Company plant, and one person Friday. He was reported in
was injured in a separate "fair" condition Saturday.
roadway a.ccident earlier.
'I'I1e accident investigated by
Tony Michael 'Kauffer, 'J:I, deputy Ubi, occurred on U. S.
Apple Grove; wai dead on ~in Henderson.
arrival at Pleasant Valley
Jerry Spencer, 21, London,
Huspital.
W. Va.,identif!ed as the driver,
Donald "Donnie" Allen was blinded by oncoming car
Payl].e, of Glenwood was lights. His vehicle hit a ditch
treated at Pleasant Valley and overturned, coming back
Hospital and then was trans- on its.wheels. In a statement to
ferred to CalleD Huntington pollee, the driver said he tried
Hospital Saturday with a head, . to avoid going into the river.
Injury. Attendants there
'Chief deputy sherHf Millard
reported he was in "serious" Halstead investigated a twocovdition.
. . vehicle wreck at ~:15 p.m. on
james R. Rich8rdson, 29, Slll,te Route 2 near · Blalne's
Ashton and James Klng;&gt;l23,•· · garag; · in Henderson. No InRoute I, Milton, were admitted juries were reported.
to the local h95Pital.
Pascal Worley, 32, Route I,
Richardson was reported in Pine Drive, Point Pleasant,
"satisfactory" cond!Uon with a was Identified as the truck
laceration of the chin. King's driver and Debra Pauley, 18,
condition was not learned, but · Gallipolis Ferry, was the other
he was being held for ob- driver.' Damages were placed
servation of a skull injury.
at $250.

in wreck

on Rt. 2

STEWA,RT Electrical Service 8.
Repair, house wiring , free
estimate. Phone 446·4561 .
211 ·11
SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and lnslalled
Russell's Plumbing, 446·4782
2'17·11

GILLENWATER'S septic tank
cleaning and rdpalr, also
house wrecking . Ph. 446·9499.
GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
Established I~ 1940.
169·11
PLUMBING - Healing &amp; Air
Conditioning. 300 Fourth Ave . 0 . P. MARTIN &amp; Son water
Ph . 446-!637.
Delivery Service.
Your
48·11
palronage will
be ap·
preclaled. Ph. 446·0463.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
2·1f
Cor. Fourth &amp; Pine
HAFFELT'S CARPETING
Phone 446-3888 or 446·4477 .
IF YOU are building a new
165·11
home or n~d new carpet,
STANDARD
r,hone Jerry Haffell, 446·1158
Plumbing &amp; Healing
or free estimates.
2 If
214Th~A~ .• - ~
187·11 DRY WALl service by con ·

Plumbing &amp; Heating

RUSSELL'S
tract. Willard Bosley, 446·
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
~954 ·
282.1f
21GalliaAve.,446·4782 . ' -·~--"''-"'------ '
."· --:------"--DEWITT' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
2 BR MOBILE home, $150 per .
Route 160al Evergreen
mo., utilities paid, on Route
Phone 446·2735
325 In Danville, Ohio. Ph. 742·
5980.
- - - - - - - - - -1-87_· 11
2'17·6

·nnr-For Rent ·

For Rent

"

4 ROOM apartment with
garage. pr ivate entrance.
Call 675-3536.
·
299·11

SLEEP ING ROOM wl!h use of
kitchen, living room, garage,
private entrance. Call 675·
3536.
27811 . FURNISHED apartment ,
~=~-:-::--::--,..---·
round floor, 4room and bath.
SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
xcellent loc;allon . No pels .
446
rates . Park Central Hotel.
· 1803·
m .lf
308.ff

We have both at

QUAIL CREEK
MOBILE
OOMMUNITY
&amp; SALES
Rodney-Cora Rd .
Rodney, Ohio '

Hours 9 a.m. to~ p.m.
Monday thru Saturday
Ph. 245·9374-245-5021
12 x 60 MOBILE home, loc;ated
In Rio Grande. 245·5267.
301 -3
:-:-::-:--=-----~

YEAR old house, 3 bedrooms, 3
miles from !own. Ph . 256·6075
between 5 and 9 p.m.
301 ·3

- - - - -.

SLEEPING rooms, weekfy
rales. free garage parking,
Libby Hotel.
24J .tf

FURNIS.HED mobile. home In
Gallipolis, 446·0338.
227·tf
--~-------

Prizes awarded

in booster drive
TUPPERs PLAINS - Cash
prizes have been awarded in
the membership contest
sponsored by the Eastern l)and
Boosters.
Receiving the a wards were
Rachel Hunter of the marching
band; Robin ·Elkins, Chester
elementary school: Keleen
Milhoan, Tuppers Plains
School, and Teresa Hannwn,
Riverview schoql. Membership
now stands at 259. The BoosterS
extended thanks to everyone
who helped with the contest
and those whQ joined the
organization as a result.

----4 ROOMS and balh , un ·

FILING DEADLINE
CLEVELAND (UPI)
Mayor and council candidates
must file petitions by 4 p.m.
Aug. 22, 1973, 40 days before the
city's Oct. 2 primary.
The deadline was annmmced
Friday by Cuyahoga County
Elections Board Director
Virgil Brown.
Mayoral candidates wUI run
as· I1Jdt!pendent.!l after voters ·
approved a charter amendment last faD to have a nonpartisan election for mayoral
candidates.
Frontrunners frO!)I the Jrimary wlll run in the general
election Nov. 6.

furnished, $95, First floor,
references, 1 child ac·
cepla ble 1 Phone 446·4416 after
5 p.m .
2'18·6

----FURNISHED Apt. parking,

GREATEST STORY EVER WRI'ITEN
THIS Is a
of a baby born in humble Surroundings, in a
distant land nearly 2,000 years ago, a baby called Jesus.
No other story compares with this, the greatest story ever
written.
This is not a new story to most Christian people, but along
with those who have not read II, a nH"eading may give renewed
interest in the birth centuries ago of this devine babe of destiny.
It may be found, authentic, simple and succinct in St. Luke,
Cbapter 2, portions of which are herewith quoted:
\.

story

central heat, two adults only,
446·0338.
248.tf

-----SLEEPING rooms for rent.
Gallla Hole! , 446·9715.
181·11

-----PILE Is soft and lofty ... color$

retain brilliance In carpets
cleaned with Blue Lustre spot
cleaning . Rent electric
shampooer $1 at Central
Supply Co.
302·6

+++

AND it came to pallS irt IIJoee days, that there went out a
decree from Caesar AugustUs, that aU the world should be taxed,
and aU went to be \BXed,everyoneintohlsolVOclty.
1 And Joseph also went up from Galllee, out of the city of
Nazareth, into Judea, unto the city of David which is called
Bethlehem, to be taxed with Mary, hl8 eSpoused wHe.
And so It was that while they were there, the days were accompll.shed that she should be delivered. And she brought forth
her first born son, and wrapped him in swaddi~ clotbes, and
laidhim.inamanger; because there was no roqm for them in the

----WELL kept carpels show the

results of regular Blue Lustre
spot cleaning . Renl electric
shampooer $1 al G. C. Murphy's lower store.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _...:302-6
SMALL house In Rio Grande. To
rent 1111 May 1. C. U. Miller,
Rio Grande Barber Shop, 245·

lm.

5535.

301·3

And there were in the same country shepherdll abiding in the
field, keeping watch over their flock by night.
And,lo1 the angel of the LDrd came upon them, and the glory
of the LDrd shone round about them: and they were sore afraid.
And the angel said unto them. Fear not: fer, behold, I bring
you good Udinga of great joy, which shaD be to all people.
For unto you is born this day, in the city of David, a Saviour,
which is Quist the Lcril.
And this shall be a sign unto you: 'Ye shall find the babe
wrapped in swaddling clothel, lying in a manger.
And suddenly there was with the BDBel a muiUtude of the
heavenly host, praising GOO, and saying:
"Glory to God in the highest, and on eartll peace, good will
toward men."

,..----~-------------~

PAY ' ONLY ONE u·TILITY
ELECTRIClfY

We furni~h Water . Stwtgt . Garbao., Collection • Ample
Parking,. lV Antenna . Wall-lo·Wall Carpeting •
Droportas - Rong" - lltfrlgorators • Air Condltlening' .
Garbage Dl.,....,ls- Dlsllwoshtrs - Heat Llmpa- Private
hiles · Swimmine Pool • r.h...,...,.,

+++

We'd like to take this opportunity to wish each and every
subscriber a Merry Chrlslmu.

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon again has
gambled the naUon's budding
good wlll with the Soviet Union
by resumption of heavy bombing In North Vietnam-and
state Department officials believe he has won.
The President has been
strongly criticized at home for
the action, taken after peace
negotiator Henry A. Klsalnger
reported a new impuse in endthe-war talks with the Communists. And the heat may
really he on when rtbe new
Congress convenes.
Blit although Soviet Comm11r
nisi Party Chief Leonid I.

w.::: ·

·.
2 BEOROOMTOWNHOUSES

llh BATHS

TARA
Fer Information CallllllrltY ' A'tt ; Ill 7JJO

vocabulary for students enrolled in the Title I reading
program at the Pomeroy Elementary School taught by Mrs.
Robert L. Jacobs. Here, 1\vo of the students examine a
greeting card replica which was created on a wall in the
classroom so that students could study reading of the holiday
greetings.

•'·

,.

'.
•, I

...,.

'IWENTY YEARS AGO, !rom the flies cllbe O.Uy Tribune
and w kly Gallil Tlmea . , . Donlld ~. 1i, G•llipolls.
sericJully injurld ID • fool faD fruD Slate street htemion
Bridp ..• Dr. fll1ulOIId Pupe lleeted pl'fllident cl Gallll County
9Jrlne Club •• ,IArrJ 8nlilllm, 14, Rt. 2, llldwell, ..,......., by
JPU1 b1ut In ._aeddent ... Rlo
polllline
mare .a, up
..t to 11-4 witb 'IS62 win over Plki!Yiew,
10U2 I'IIIIP OVIr Lte'1 ODDege and '11-41 trlumpb OYII' CUm:
btilrnd 11M •
'111111 Mpainllto up IC.'\Iflng 1--ce to
aearlJ ..... llllllt. lopiiD nall011 ... Inrnton cbnpi GAllS
. ..U 8 Ji+tu "IIU Bltit Dl!l'lll ~·

G..- !WI••

e.

Brezhnev decried the renewed
attacks on the north Thursday,
Washington officials considered his reaction a
relaUvely mild one unlikely to
close . any diplomatic doors
between the two countries.
In his speech on the 50th
anniversary of the establish·
ment of the Soviet Union,
Brezhnv told a Moscow
meeting that the future of
Soviet-American relations
"wiD depend on the course of
events In the inunediate future,
and, in particular, on the turn
in the question of ending the
war in Vietnam."
Brezhnev's statement was

Pentagon critic removed
.

.. WASHINGTON IUPI) - Gordoa Rule, a clvlllaa of,
flclal ol the N8VJ wbo bu lotig beea aa oatspokea erlllc ol
Pet11a1011 ww, b11 been realllgaed alter rd1111Dg ·1
requell lblt be retire.
' Aimotmcement of bil reallipmeal cfUIIe tbree days
Iller Rille, 1 redoltllre4, elpr-cllompbiJ former Navy
captala, pllblldy erltldud Pmldelll Nlloa's appolulmeDI
of Bey L. Alb, former preeldent.of Uttoa lnd111trles, u
director ol the Olflce ol Maiapmeat •d Badcet.
Rale baa beea director of lbe Proearemeat Control aad
Oearuee Seetloa of the Na'l')' Mloterle1 Commud, a
. . . . a year job Ia wblcb be reviewed llld often
dWlealed Navy coiiii'IICII worth
to " blllioa a
)'e8'. 'l1le Defeue Depmmeiil said Friday he bU been
reualped to be 1 eoooallaiit at lbe Navy'• Loslltle1
Mlalpmeat Sebool Ill aearby Aliacollla - elearly i
demodoil.

~

~

"lllllloD

+++
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Charles
Rogen, Point Pleasant; James
Slewa1, Weal Columbia; Mrs.
Glle Diehl, 1Gt1, Alberts; Mrs.
Jaclde llwlca, 1011, Point
Pltaant; Either &amp;Ia, Point
Ple111nt; Brenda Sharp,
HenderacM; Mn. Paul JusUce,
dqhter, Rlclne, lnd Hazel

Rouab. . . llaY,IIl•

fund enriched

MASoN - Wahama High
SChool's White Falcon Baucl.
under the direction of Gerald
Slmm0111 and Otarlel Yeago,
has been'selected by the office
of Gov. Arch A. Moore to
repiWtnt the alate of Weet
VIrginia at the Prealdel!tlal
InauguraUon Janlllr)' . 20 lD
WashiDBion, tl. C.
In order to participate, the
band must raise approximately $6,000.

inauguration

WINS SPIRIT AWARD
AKRON (UPI) - Winfield S.
Cbapman, 83, a powtt truck
driver for Goodyear Tire olt
Rubbef Co. In 1M Aneelee, hal
won the 1972 Goodtear Spirit
Awatd,
The a111rd II pr mled an·
nually to the Goodyear em,
ploye who comblnea an
"out&amp;andlng work record wlth
qulltanding COilllilunlty eer•
vice."
Chapman was presented
wJth $1,000 and a bronze
medallion in ceremonlea here
Friday.

THE CHRISTMAS HOUDAY season has provided·&amp;new

.Xfl. :.:.a •••.•.•.•.n.c.~\l.l!'W.«':;:;;w-,;:;;;:::ru.&gt;#.o::;;:w.m:r.=

-

Children's TV .

Band invited to

GALLI''OLIS
The at the new medical center,
. impre5sive sum of $187.50 was supplied by Wells Television,
presented to the · Holzer rent for $1.80 per day including
Medical Center Pediatric tax. However, WeDs agreed to
TeleviSion Fund as net profit · reduce the rental price to 2S
from the Gillian Moore · cents per day lor the 14 sets In
Christmas Variety Show at the pectlatric unit. This totals
Washington School Auditorium $106 per month,
Saturday evening, Dec. 9. 'l'hls
Mrs. Gillian Moore, em·
special ftind provides free played by the French Art
television for the children who Colony at Riverby as an Jn.
are palients in the pediatric slructor in dance, plsnned,
unit at Holzer Medical Center. coordinated and produced the
As a result of this donallon, Chr.isimas Variety Show with
combined with the $25 con- . her students performing
tribut!on from Thomas specifically for the pediatric
Clothiers, Gallipolis, free TV is television fund . Assisting MM!.
assured for children at Holzer Moore were Mrs. Tom Rieser
Medical Center through and Mrs. Anne Fischer, both of
February, 1974.
Gall(polls, and Merlyn Rosa of
To complete the year 1973, a Rio Grande College.
check for $106 was received
Individuals, bualnesses or
from Bob Evana Farms, which organizations wishing to
pays for December, 1973,
donate to the ·pediatric
Sixteen businesses and four Mevls!on fund may do ao by
civic and social organ!zaUons contacting Earl Neff; Teodora
contributed to the pedwtr!c Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631.
television fund to cjate. TV sei.R

bluffing another pot ·

APARTMENT for construction 2 BEDROOM trailer 50 x 10,
Cheshire, Ohio, good location,
men . Ph . 446·0756.
references
. Call 36J.7309.
267·11
2'18·11

Looking for a mobile home
lot or a qua lily mobile home?

AT ABLE; FULL OF STUFFED FIGURES signilicant to the Christmas season has been
used at the Pomeroy Elementary School's Title I r~adlng progrtun classroom to teach the
yOitqgsters enrolled words associated with the holiday season. Here a student examines a
stuffed reindeer. one of the many items collected by the teacher, Mrs, Jacobs, for the study.

White House gambler

-:-::-:----:-----

A.UCTION
SERVIa

"SELL .THE AUCTION

ONE KILLED IN CRASH ~ Mason County Sberiff's
Deputies Robert Ubi and Fred Taylor investigate ilie
wreckage of the auto in which Tony Michael Kauffer, Apple
Grove, was killed.- PHOTO B'tsAM NICHOI.S IJ.

VARIETY PROCEEDS BENE;FIT CHILDREN - Mrs. 1'lxn Rieser, Earl Neff, Mrs.
Gillian Moore, l tor, with Neff holding show prooeeds. Neff Is on the Holzer Medical Center
Vohmteer Service League Conununity Steering Committee in charge of the Cbilclren's TV fund.

Veteran~ Memorial HDOpltal

ADMITTED
Kevin
Barton, Reedsville; Patricia
Cleland, Langsville: Nara
Hartman, Long Bottom.
DISCHARGED
Ava
Gilkey, Orville Gaul, Holly
McCoy, Edith McCoy, Ruth
Carr, Sue Seelig.

.

DOC
SMITH
SAYS

1972 BUICK

cars must go by January
1st!!!

ELECTRA

Electra 2 dr. hdtp., custom, air
cond ., AM-FM, power windows
&amp; seat. Demonstrator, 8.300
miles.

'4995

peppered with denunciations of
the bombing campaign, described as ''the new American
imperialist crimes in Viet·

1972

narn."
State
Department
specialists, after preliminary
scrutiny of Brezhnev's
remarks , noted that the
Communist chief announced rio
drastic actions which could
affect the cooperation consolidated at the Moscow sum.mit meeting wltb Nixon In
May.
'"lbey at&gt;pear still to want to
continue on the course set at
the Moscow summit, although
as long as the problem in
Vietnam exists, it doesn't help
the atmosphere," one official
said.
·
From this assessment, the
situation appeared much the
same as on May 8 when the
President ordered the mining
of North Vielnamese harbors,
yet Will! still able to pull off ~·
Moscow swnmlt meeting.
Similarly, U.S. officials did
not swear particularly dis·
turbed by Commllnist Cbinese
denunciations of the intensive
U.S. bombing raids.
The Flori~ White House
said Friday the President
would keep the bombing in
effect unUI the Communists
agree to an acceptable peace
plan-but left open the
possibility of a temporary halt
during (bristmas.
While the Nixon admlnlstraUon appeared basically unmoved by worldwide protest
against the U.S. bombing
raids, the State Department
aald ll'Oiiminary expreuio..
of regret had been. extended to
the Egyptian and Pollah
governments. American
bomling apparently damaged
I I'!Jllllh freighter In Hlipbonl
harbor and llruck the EDPtian rnlulon·ln Hanoi.

END-OF-TttE YEAR USED
CAR CLEARANCE! All

CHEVROLET

Blazer, 4 wheel drive, 4 speed,
350 eng., 13,000 miles. Never
been off hard road.

•3795

1972 PONTIAC

1972 PONTIAC
-

Gran Prix, red, white vlpyl top,
white bucket seats, 3,200·mlles.

'4195

1972 BUICK
Skyjark 4 dr ., air cond. Orie
owner, Jlke new.

•3295

1972

CHEVELLE

Ventura II. air cond., red. black
vinyl top. Sprint package,
12,000 miles. Sharp,

2 Dr. ~dip., auto., p. steering,
vinyl top. sharp.

•2995

'2M5

1970 MUSTANG

1970 BUICK

cyl., auto. lri!ns., vinyl top,
extra nice.

6

'1895
1968

CHEVELLE

2 Or. hdlp., 307 engine, auto.,
P.S., low miles. Two to choose
from ,

'1595

Skylark 2 Dr. hdtp., air cond. ·
vinyl top, one owner. Extra
nice .

'2595

1972 OPEL
St. Wgn., 4 speed, 13,000 miles,
Iight blue, worfh more.

'1995

�lM . -The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 24, 1972

.

• .. ' ~

'

'
~

.. '

.j

....,

'

' '

IJe•al.-dfo The Greatar Middle OlaiD J'alley

ONE-YEAR service employees honond recently by Bob
EvaiiB Farms are,left to right, Tim Metzler, Darrell Haney,

· Bill Annstroog, Walter Hively arid Daw Morgan. Presentlnil _ -

awards ill Bob Evans. ·

F1FTEEN YEARS SE~VfCE - Bob Evans Farms
employees honored for 15 years service _recently are Gene

NEW EMPLOYEES -Five new employees were honored during the recent Bob Evan$
Farms Christmas dinner held at the Elks Hall in Gallipolis. Accep'i.J awards from Evans, left
to right, are Don Simpkins, Paul Russell, Delores Spencer, Boh Ratliff, Victor George and
Robert Evans. ·
..

THREE
YEAR
HONOREE
Linden
Elkins, left, was honored by
Bop Evans Farms recently
for three years service with
the finn .

BOB EVANS Farms employees honored for 10 to 15 years
service were Bernard Holley, John Smith, George Robinette,
SALES REPORTED
POMEROY - November
1972 sales of Series. E &amp; H
United States Savings Bonds i.n
Ohio were $30.2 million. The
State attained 100.8 pet. of its
annual ··sales quota Nov.
30, with sales totaling $348
million for the first eleven

Service held for
Stella Wilcox

Jones, Lowell can, Adrian Haner, Paul Smith, Mary Skidmore and Elmer Hill.

Elizabeth Fisher, Betty Skidmore, John Fuller, Clarence
Fowler, Tom Ragan, and Ken Haner.

months. Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
GALLIPOLIS - Bob Evans Farms emMeigs County Volunteer
ployees were honored with a Christmas dinner
Savmgs Bonds Chairman, said
recently at the Elks Hall in Gallipolis. Activities
November sales in the county
included presentation of awards to individuals
were $27,467. At the end of
November the county had · with one, three, five, 10 and 15 years service with
the firm. (see pictures) .
achieved 95.2 pet. of its annual
·
Bob Evans presented employees gifts. Engoal.

GALLIPOLIS - Out of town
guests attending the funeral of
Stella Ewing Wilcox at the
Vinton_Baptist Church Friday
were Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
tertainment followed.
Wilcox, Mr. and. Mrs. Robert
Six, and Rev. and Mrs. Russell
Waltz, all of Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. John C. Foltz and children
of Alexandria, Va.; Robert
his baby sitter and never
Merkle and Mrs . Philip
makes jokes about "flying to
Walperl, Plain City, Ohio; Carl
CUba".
Jones, Johnstown, Ohio;
\he s~ey 14.the 41\el\ fu an
Merrill Jones, Dr. John Wllcdx
effort by stewardesses to give
1nd Mr. and Mrs. Donald_ By ROBERT F. BUCKHORN
even
before
takeoff.
"pussycats".
·
,
their job a new image.
Wilcox, Columbus; Dr. and
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
Insists
on
talking
to
the
According
to
the
ATA,
a
,
Last week members of the
Mrs. Joseph Kahn, Monroe, airline passenger who pictures
person
seated
next
to
him
even
passenger
can
win
the
Stewardess Anti-Defamation
Mich.; Mr.- and Mrs. Clarence himself as a man-about-town
though
the
captive
seatmate
pussycat
accolade
if
he
does
Defense League and the stew.
Gray, Wellston; Mrs. James and a sophisticated air traveler
would
rather
read.
·
what
the
stewardess
ardesses
For Women's Rights
McCormick and Richard may be a Putorius Foetidus to
FIVE YEAR HONOREES- Sandy Hardesty and Melvin Irwin accept five-year awards
~Thinks he is a. Casanova. requests-stays in his seat held a meeting In New York to
McCormick, Charleston, W. the airline stewardess.
from Bob Evans during firm's recent Christmas dinner at Elks Hall In Gallipolis.
·But
the stewardesses also until the plane sto~, keeps his counteract the image some
Va.
That's a polecat, sir.
have tbeir favorite type of seat belt fastened, doesn't have of them as empty-headed
Pallbearers were Kelly
According to the Air Trans- passenger who qualify as expect the stewardess to act as sexpots.
Huntley, Vinton ; John Foltz- port Association (ATA), a
and John Clark Foltz; trade organization
Alexandria, Va.; Bob Merkle, representing the major
Plain City; Clarence Gray, airlines, stewardesses tend to
Wellston, and John Wilcox, put passengers into two
Columbus.
categories-polecats or pussycats.
1
How does the · stewardess
WASHINGTON (UP!) -A . social problems decrease when by HEW's James O'Toole, an report by s; .ylng alienation spot a polecat?
worker jumps up from his job workers participate in the anthropologist who formerly from jobs is "manifested In
"He invariably wears a dryand assaults coworkers. work decisions affecting their dii:ected field Investigations for worker alienation, alcoholism,
cleaner's pseudo-handkerchief
Another man takes drugs or lives and when their respon- the President's Commission on drug addiction and other In his suit breast pocket. His
nlps whisky to aUay boredom. sibility for their work is but- campus Unrest, concluded its symptoms of poor mental
stockings are low around his
health."
·
An employable youth becomes ~essed by participation in
ankles-either white or argyle.
a beggar. Workers strike profits," the report said.
I
1 And the talon on his zipper
against the Inhumanity of a
HEW Secretary Elliot L. 1 .Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
sticks out," is the description
perfect assembly line.
Richardson received the report 1 than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by the editor)
one stewardess gave the ATA.
These seemingly isolated warmly at a news conference, I and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be 1 In I! series of Interviews with
examples are patterns occur- saying, "! cannot recall any I withheld upon publication, but will be revealed on request. 1 stewardesses, the ATA came
ring with alarming frequency other governmental report I Letters should be In good taste, addressing lasues, nol per- I up with a ''polecat scorecard."
I sonalltles.
1
88 traditional ~pts of work which is more doughty, con1
· According to the stewardesses,
becoine obsolete, according to troversial and yet responsible
I
a polecat is the passenger who:
a 211-page l'I!POrt "Work In than this one."
~
1 - Tries to upset fellow
America" sulmitted today to
"Young workers appear to I
•••
•
:
1 passengers by asking questions
the Department of Health, be as comniitted to the in- I
1
such as "how long do you think
E!Iucation and Welfare.
stitution of work as their elders
I this pla~e would float if it
"Significant numbers of have been, b)It many are Deilf Citizens of Meigs County :
'
'
At a r~nt Meigs cOunty commissioners' meeting, action I crashes m the water?"
American workers are rebelling
against
the
was taken to release Mr . and Mrs. Harry Clark as superintendent
- Wants a double Scotch
~tlsfied with the quality of anachronistic authoritatlanism
their working lives" because of of the work place," the report and matron of the Meigs County Ollldren's Home. The votes , _ _ _...:.s,....,.____
were Robert Clark and Ralph Warden Ours to dismiss the Clarks
dull, repetitive, meaningless said.
tasks that offer liWe .,tlallenge
"Older Americans suffer the from their duties and Richard Karr to continue their duties.
member of the Olildren's Home Citizens' Commiitee, I
or' autonomy, the study said. ultimate job dissatisfaction: wishAsto aexpress
my regret that the employment of the Clarks had
The report, a departmental they are denied meaningful
study conducted by a panel of jobs even when they have to terminate so soon. I feel that Mr. and Mrs. Clark have done
'
10, auggested that employers demonstrable skills and are their duties to the best of their ability. There bas been a
tremendous
improvement
In
the
Children's
Home
since
their
modify traditional views of physically capable of being
••
arrival the middle of August, including improvement~ in the
work to Include employes in productive."
•
children and physical improvements to the home Itself.
profit-sharing and decisionAs an example of frustration,
The c4ildren respect Mr. and Mrs. Clark and are upset that
making.
· the report cited a case In wl)ich
they have to leave. They now realize that there are some people
"Seve1·al dozen well-doc: "a jury (efused to convict an
w)Jo care about their welfare and want to love and-treat them as
umented experiments show employe who killed two fore- individual hwnan beings.
that productivity increases and men and another worker in an
The neighbors on Mulberry Heights have complimented the
auto plant on the grounds of children's behavior since the Clarks have been responsible. They
temporary insanity, when have also noted a change In their personal appearance.
SERVING
testimony . pointed
up
The physical improvements to the home are numerous. The
inhumane working concounty would be shocked to have seen the home of their children
ditions."
88 !first saw it. It has not only been kept "spic and span" due to
And the report said frustra- Mrs. Clark and her helpers, but it also bas a more home like
tion exists even in the. best of atmosphere.
working conditions, identi(ying _
I would like to recognize the fact that It was only possible to
the efficiency of an assembly
obtain these added material ImprovementS such as proper
.
. .
line as the cause of a wildcat lighting, adequate bathroom facilities, dressers, a freezer,
Dance to the Music of
$10.00 Per Person, Including Meal and Party
strike in Lordstown, Ohio.
Favors. Make reserv~lions early. Tocloy.
neceuary bedclothing, and eating utensils from the com'
''This event highlights the · missioners of our county. I want them and the other citizens of
role of the hwnan element In the county to know I appreciate th6ir cooperation concerning
Admission AI Door Wllhout Meal SS.OO.
!l'oductivity: What does it gain these matten.
the employer to have a perI a11o apprec11te the residents and concerned people who
fectly efficient aasembly !ina, have so gracioualy given donations of furniture and other items
If his workers are out on strike for the home and our children.
because of the opprellive and
I II'IY that God will cootlnue to watch over these children
debumanized aperlence of ..d will reward the Clarka in their further endeavors as they
PHONE 992-3629
~=:.U tvorking 1111 the perfect Une ?" have been a wonderful couple serving mankind.
POMEROY I OHIO
. . . . . . . ._
tbe llknember par,el headed
.Sincerely, carol Jean Adams.

IF q~e COM·E!1 W
A THOU,!5ANQ MILES
Me; .I'LL 5CR~AM!.
•

Some air passengers fit into

two categories - polecat or pussycat

Perfect -assembly .line
makes workers rebel

.

1

AN'IWAr.(
HERE'&lt;G

1LL 6ET'GHE

EVE~

OOE5N i
1

.REMEM~ER WHAT

TI-lE
CARO..

HAPPENED..

I

I

Ju~r wHAT I PloN'r

NEED... A POOCHIE -.
Cf.IRI~TMA~!
'

b)' Bill Bowrilla

!'

Wish You and Your Family a

~,r~r:Now...
IT :seEMS ~!

Very Merry Christmas

00 0

!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

0

o-;
0
0

STARTING
A'T 9 P.M.

Big Screen

Join Our Gala!

Prime Rib Dinner

Fun For AU!

At 8 'tillO:OO

Wll..LIE

The Meigs Inn

0
0

.... Sunday, Dec. 31

ZENITH
Color T.V.

Tl-lAT WOULD 66 JV5T
LIKE f.IER NOT TO
REMEMBER ... 5HE'lL
COME 'tO 7EE ME,TOO...
I KNOW ~HE WILt...

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

I

I

'

The Management and Employees of

--------------------------~

..8-ea-t:
li:llth

.

{

•

•

I . •'

I

WHAT

. ' :. I$ :'

0

. .0 •-lo

· l', ·o ' '

· o··
· IT?
. .

·o ·

.o

0

0

4' o·
6 ·
0

0

0

�lM . -The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 24, 1972

.

• .. ' ~

'

'
~

.. '

.j

....,

'

' '

IJe•al.-dfo The Greatar Middle OlaiD J'alley

ONE-YEAR service employees honond recently by Bob
EvaiiB Farms are,left to right, Tim Metzler, Darrell Haney,

· Bill Annstroog, Walter Hively arid Daw Morgan. Presentlnil _ -

awards ill Bob Evans. ·

F1FTEEN YEARS SE~VfCE - Bob Evans Farms
employees honored for 15 years service _recently are Gene

NEW EMPLOYEES -Five new employees were honored during the recent Bob Evan$
Farms Christmas dinner held at the Elks Hall in Gallipolis. Accep'i.J awards from Evans, left
to right, are Don Simpkins, Paul Russell, Delores Spencer, Boh Ratliff, Victor George and
Robert Evans. ·
..

THREE
YEAR
HONOREE
Linden
Elkins, left, was honored by
Bop Evans Farms recently
for three years service with
the finn .

BOB EVANS Farms employees honored for 10 to 15 years
service were Bernard Holley, John Smith, George Robinette,
SALES REPORTED
POMEROY - November
1972 sales of Series. E &amp; H
United States Savings Bonds i.n
Ohio were $30.2 million. The
State attained 100.8 pet. of its
annual ··sales quota Nov.
30, with sales totaling $348
million for the first eleven

Service held for
Stella Wilcox

Jones, Lowell can, Adrian Haner, Paul Smith, Mary Skidmore and Elmer Hill.

Elizabeth Fisher, Betty Skidmore, John Fuller, Clarence
Fowler, Tom Ragan, and Ken Haner.

months. Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
GALLIPOLIS - Bob Evans Farms emMeigs County Volunteer
ployees were honored with a Christmas dinner
Savmgs Bonds Chairman, said
recently at the Elks Hall in Gallipolis. Activities
November sales in the county
included presentation of awards to individuals
were $27,467. At the end of
November the county had · with one, three, five, 10 and 15 years service with
the firm. (see pictures) .
achieved 95.2 pet. of its annual
·
Bob Evans presented employees gifts. Engoal.

GALLIPOLIS - Out of town
guests attending the funeral of
Stella Ewing Wilcox at the
Vinton_Baptist Church Friday
were Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
tertainment followed.
Wilcox, Mr. and. Mrs. Robert
Six, and Rev. and Mrs. Russell
Waltz, all of Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. John C. Foltz and children
of Alexandria, Va.; Robert
his baby sitter and never
Merkle and Mrs . Philip
makes jokes about "flying to
Walperl, Plain City, Ohio; Carl
CUba".
Jones, Johnstown, Ohio;
\he s~ey 14.the 41\el\ fu an
Merrill Jones, Dr. John Wllcdx
effort by stewardesses to give
1nd Mr. and Mrs. Donald_ By ROBERT F. BUCKHORN
even
before
takeoff.
"pussycats".
·
,
their job a new image.
Wilcox, Columbus; Dr. and
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
Insists
on
talking
to
the
According
to
the
ATA,
a
,
Last week members of the
Mrs. Joseph Kahn, Monroe, airline passenger who pictures
person
seated
next
to
him
even
passenger
can
win
the
Stewardess Anti-Defamation
Mich.; Mr.- and Mrs. Clarence himself as a man-about-town
though
the
captive
seatmate
pussycat
accolade
if
he
does
Defense League and the stew.
Gray, Wellston; Mrs. James and a sophisticated air traveler
would
rather
read.
·
what
the
stewardess
ardesses
For Women's Rights
McCormick and Richard may be a Putorius Foetidus to
FIVE YEAR HONOREES- Sandy Hardesty and Melvin Irwin accept five-year awards
~Thinks he is a. Casanova. requests-stays in his seat held a meeting In New York to
McCormick, Charleston, W. the airline stewardess.
from Bob Evans during firm's recent Christmas dinner at Elks Hall In Gallipolis.
·But
the stewardesses also until the plane sto~, keeps his counteract the image some
Va.
That's a polecat, sir.
have tbeir favorite type of seat belt fastened, doesn't have of them as empty-headed
Pallbearers were Kelly
According to the Air Trans- passenger who qualify as expect the stewardess to act as sexpots.
Huntley, Vinton ; John Foltz- port Association (ATA), a
and John Clark Foltz; trade organization
Alexandria, Va.; Bob Merkle, representing the major
Plain City; Clarence Gray, airlines, stewardesses tend to
Wellston, and John Wilcox, put passengers into two
Columbus.
categories-polecats or pussycats.
1
How does the · stewardess
WASHINGTON (UP!) -A . social problems decrease when by HEW's James O'Toole, an report by s; .ylng alienation spot a polecat?
worker jumps up from his job workers participate in the anthropologist who formerly from jobs is "manifested In
"He invariably wears a dryand assaults coworkers. work decisions affecting their dii:ected field Investigations for worker alienation, alcoholism,
cleaner's pseudo-handkerchief
Another man takes drugs or lives and when their respon- the President's Commission on drug addiction and other In his suit breast pocket. His
nlps whisky to aUay boredom. sibility for their work is but- campus Unrest, concluded its symptoms of poor mental
stockings are low around his
health."
·
An employable youth becomes ~essed by participation in
ankles-either white or argyle.
a beggar. Workers strike profits," the report said.
I
1 And the talon on his zipper
against the Inhumanity of a
HEW Secretary Elliot L. 1 .Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
sticks out," is the description
perfect assembly line.
Richardson received the report 1 than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by the editor)
one stewardess gave the ATA.
These seemingly isolated warmly at a news conference, I and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be 1 In I! series of Interviews with
examples are patterns occur- saying, "! cannot recall any I withheld upon publication, but will be revealed on request. 1 stewardesses, the ATA came
ring with alarming frequency other governmental report I Letters should be In good taste, addressing lasues, nol per- I up with a ''polecat scorecard."
I sonalltles.
1
88 traditional ~pts of work which is more doughty, con1
· According to the stewardesses,
becoine obsolete, according to troversial and yet responsible
I
a polecat is the passenger who:
a 211-page l'I!POrt "Work In than this one."
~
1 - Tries to upset fellow
America" sulmitted today to
"Young workers appear to I
•••
•
:
1 passengers by asking questions
the Department of Health, be as comniitted to the in- I
1
such as "how long do you think
E!Iucation and Welfare.
stitution of work as their elders
I this pla~e would float if it
"Significant numbers of have been, b)It many are Deilf Citizens of Meigs County :
'
'
At a r~nt Meigs cOunty commissioners' meeting, action I crashes m the water?"
American workers are rebelling
against
the
was taken to release Mr . and Mrs. Harry Clark as superintendent
- Wants a double Scotch
~tlsfied with the quality of anachronistic authoritatlanism
their working lives" because of of the work place," the report and matron of the Meigs County Ollldren's Home. The votes , _ _ _...:.s,....,.____
were Robert Clark and Ralph Warden Ours to dismiss the Clarks
dull, repetitive, meaningless said.
tasks that offer liWe .,tlallenge
"Older Americans suffer the from their duties and Richard Karr to continue their duties.
member of the Olildren's Home Citizens' Commiitee, I
or' autonomy, the study said. ultimate job dissatisfaction: wishAsto aexpress
my regret that the employment of the Clarks had
The report, a departmental they are denied meaningful
study conducted by a panel of jobs even when they have to terminate so soon. I feel that Mr. and Mrs. Clark have done
'
10, auggested that employers demonstrable skills and are their duties to the best of their ability. There bas been a
tremendous
improvement
In
the
Children's
Home
since
their
modify traditional views of physically capable of being
••
arrival the middle of August, including improvement~ in the
work to Include employes in productive."
•
children and physical improvements to the home Itself.
profit-sharing and decisionAs an example of frustration,
The c4ildren respect Mr. and Mrs. Clark and are upset that
making.
· the report cited a case In wl)ich
they have to leave. They now realize that there are some people
"Seve1·al dozen well-doc: "a jury (efused to convict an
w)Jo care about their welfare and want to love and-treat them as
umented experiments show employe who killed two fore- individual hwnan beings.
that productivity increases and men and another worker in an
The neighbors on Mulberry Heights have complimented the
auto plant on the grounds of children's behavior since the Clarks have been responsible. They
temporary insanity, when have also noted a change In their personal appearance.
SERVING
testimony . pointed
up
The physical improvements to the home are numerous. The
inhumane working concounty would be shocked to have seen the home of their children
ditions."
88 !first saw it. It has not only been kept "spic and span" due to
And the report said frustra- Mrs. Clark and her helpers, but it also bas a more home like
tion exists even in the. best of atmosphere.
working conditions, identi(ying _
I would like to recognize the fact that It was only possible to
the efficiency of an assembly
obtain these added material ImprovementS such as proper
.
. .
line as the cause of a wildcat lighting, adequate bathroom facilities, dressers, a freezer,
Dance to the Music of
$10.00 Per Person, Including Meal and Party
strike in Lordstown, Ohio.
Favors. Make reserv~lions early. Tocloy.
neceuary bedclothing, and eating utensils from the com'
''This event highlights the · missioners of our county. I want them and the other citizens of
role of the hwnan element In the county to know I appreciate th6ir cooperation concerning
Admission AI Door Wllhout Meal SS.OO.
!l'oductivity: What does it gain these matten.
the employer to have a perI a11o apprec11te the residents and concerned people who
fectly efficient aasembly !ina, have so gracioualy given donations of furniture and other items
If his workers are out on strike for the home and our children.
because of the opprellive and
I II'IY that God will cootlnue to watch over these children
debumanized aperlence of ..d will reward the Clarka in their further endeavors as they
PHONE 992-3629
~=:.U tvorking 1111 the perfect Une ?" have been a wonderful couple serving mankind.
POMEROY I OHIO
. . . . . . . ._
tbe llknember par,el headed
.Sincerely, carol Jean Adams.

IF q~e COM·E!1 W
A THOU,!5ANQ MILES
Me; .I'LL 5CR~AM!.
•

Some air passengers fit into

two categories - polecat or pussycat

Perfect -assembly .line
makes workers rebel

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NEED... A POOCHIE -.
Cf.IRI~TMA~!
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Wish You and Your Family a

~,r~r:Now...
IT :seEMS ~!

Very Merry Christmas

00 0

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STARTING
A'T 9 P.M.

Big Screen

Join Our Gala!

Prime Rib Dinner

Fun For AU!

At 8 'tillO:OO

Wll..LIE

The Meigs Inn

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ZENITH
Color T.V.

Tl-lAT WOULD 66 JV5T
LIKE f.IER NOT TO
REMEMBER ... 5HE'lL
COME 'tO 7EE ME,TOO...
I KNOW ~HE WILt...

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

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G~ETINGS, MISS PeTUNIA!
Fti..ICITA\'ioN$

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~uman

By CARL E. CIJRISTlENSEN org~nic failure causing a
KANS.\SCITY,Mo. (UP!) - collapse of the cardiovascular
Hlu'ry S Trurtum, 88, tbe 33rd System."
·
Alnerican ~esident, died to- . · Bess 'l'ruman, 87, the former
day. The heart of the fiery man chief executive's c,hildhood
from Missouri failed at tbe end sweetheart whom he married
of a 22-day battle against age more than half a century ago,
and disease.
·
was at their mansion in nearby
· Death came at 7:50 ·a.m. Independence, Mo., when her
(CST) as Truman lay in a deep husband died. She was at his
coma in a sixth Door room of bedside almost 12 hours OlristResearch Hospital, fighting mas Day.
with his \L'lual courage to stay
The funeral will he held later
alive.
this week. In the meantime, the
"The , hon.orable Harry S body '.will lie in state at the
Truman, 33rd President 0! the Truman Memorial Library in
Vnited States, died at 7:50a.m. Independence,.
Truman picked his own
. (CST)," , the official medicaJ
statement said, "The cause of epitaph·. He said his life could
death was a cOmplexity of have no better meanin~ than

I •

the words he 011ce saw inscribed !I a frootier grave:
"Here lies Jack Williams. He
done his damndest."
And Truman said this is the
· way he wanted to be rememhered: "I did what had to he

done."

•

Age simply caught up with
Truman, wbo made some of
this nation's most irr\)lortant
decisions of this century ..,.the
ato!Jlic bom~ing of Japan, Ute
filerlin Blockade, the dispatch
of U.S. troops to Korea and
many more.
Truman's funeral will be
held Friday at the Truman
Library. His body will lie in
s~te one day, Thursilay, for

public viewing. The funeral
will be a private ceremony, his
family said.
Truman outlived most of
those with whom he shared a
· place in history - Stalin,
Churchill, · De
Gaulle,
MacArthur, Eisenhower and
even Thomas E; Dewey, whom
he.defeated for the presidency
in one of the most ~tunning
upsets In American political
history.
The only comtemporary Tru. man did not outlive was '
Chairman , Mao rse-ttmg of
- China, who became 79 today.
Truman waged a bitter war
with Mao over Korea, but both
men lived to see relations

between their nations begin Ill
thaw .
"the people of the United
States, and especially the press
of Utis country, have lost a
great friend," said Ronald
Jessie, a family spokesman.
"While we lost a friend, two
great ladies lost a husband and
father. I know that in your
coverage during Ute next few
days that yQU will show them
Ute same consideration and
respect for their privacy you
did during Qjs lifetime," Jessie
told newsmen.
Lyndon B. Johnson, now the
only living former president,
eulogized Truman in a state.
ment from his LBJ Ranch in

Texas.
"A 20th Century giant is
gone," Johnson ·said. "Few
men or any tirr\es ever shaped
the world as did the man from
Independence. President Truman presided over the destiny
ol this century during one of its
most turbulent eras, never
flinching in the face of crucial
national choices. His qecisions
changed' Ute course of human
events Utroughout the world. 1
"He had his critics and
detracrors, but history Is just
and Harry Truman will live on
In the memory of free people as
one of Ute greatest i:nen to lead
(Continued on Page 12)

GIN6E.R-

BR.E.AD

•

•

Devoted To The {nleresla Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXV NO 177 ·

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1972

,.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENS

.
Citizens rallying to
Bombs away! auaz.n I raise
$5,000 for band

::::::::::~":&gt;.::~t~:::~::.-:::::::::::::~-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.-:::••

~

SAIGON (UP!) -The U.S.
command announced today
U.s. bomberS had resumed
Uteir raids over North Vietnam
after a 30-hour Christmas halt,
and the North Vietnamese
delegation In Paris said B52s
were hitting Hanoi, Haiphong
and other cities.
The Christmas halt in the
bombings that the Communists
said hit North Vietnam with
40,000 tons of bombs last week
-double the explosive pow~r of
Ute atomic bomb that fell on
Hiroshima -as believed ordered by President Nixon in
hopes the Communists would
return to the jieace table.
Neither
u.s.Florida
command
in
Saigon
northethe
White

A Tat! of'

say whether the bombing
resumed today was airried at
· the Hanoi-Haiphong area or
war. as intensive as last week's
bombing -the most intensive
of the war.
But in Paris the North
Vietnamese issued a statement
saying, · "The Nixon ad- ·
ministration, in the· night of
Dec. 24 and as of Dec. 26 has
multiplied raids by B52s and
various other types of aircraft
with a view of razing to the
ground Hanoi, Haiphong and
numerous other towns and
populous areas of North
Vietnam."
During last week's raids the
u.s. command
gave
details
of the bombing
and few
the

agencies or from diplomats in
Hanoi. Hanoi Radio r~ported
hundreds of persons killed and
thousands made homeless in
Ute raids.
,
"U.S. air crews resumed
operations over North Vietnam
at 1300 hours (midnight EST
Monday) today after a 3s.bour
holiday stand down," the
command said.
"There are no new limitalions on U.S. aircraft since the
bOmbing resumed," a spokesman said, but declined to say
whether 'this meant U.S .
warplanes had resumed raids

~l

.

over Hanoi and Haiphong.
Three hours before the
command announced the resumption of the raids, 852
bombers lined the taxiways at
Andersen A'r Force base in
Guam and began taking off at
five-minute intervals headed
toward Indochina. Military
spokesmen at Andersen
refused Ill say where they were
going.
· U.S. pilots halted their all .out
bombing of the North ·Christmas day. The bomb halt
followed seven days of the
(Continued on page 12)

President Harry S Truman
In late years .

·

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Succeeded FDR

1

MASON - Wahama High School's White Falcon Band has
·been invited to represent West Virginia in the
Presidential Inauguration parade in Washington, D. c. next
month, but there'sa lot of money involved if the hand is togo.
In order to participate, the band must raise approximtely
·$5,000. Individuals and business places in the area are being
asked tQ help. Already, several persons have joined a drive to
raise the money.
Tom Fisher, president 9f Fisher Stores Inc., which includes
ownership and operation of Shopper's Maris In Point Pleasant,
Maspn and Gallipolis, was amon~ the first to contribute. Fisher,
who has also been a long time supp,orter of Mason County's three
high school bands, presented Gerald Sinunons with a $100 check
and in doing so challenges other businesses and firms to join him.
In N:ew Haven, the community Is going all outto offer the band
its support. This past weekend collections were taken at Ute
Unitedfund,
Methodist Church In the amount of $110toward the special
band

Truman became president communism after the war, he
April 12, 1945 on Ute death of acted deciBively on the foreign
Franklin D. Roosevelt with front but raised the ire of
World War II climaxing In McCarthy-era conservatives at
Europe and raging In the home. He pualted through the
Pacific.
· Marshall plan In the face of
Critics called him "that little Russian post-war- eiiP8111ion,
man In the White House." That sent U.S. troops to Korea when
Image may have been a hidden , Communists Invaded South
factor In his stunning 1948 re- Korea, .and broke the Soviet
election upset of Thomas E. blockade of Berlin with a
Dewey.
rnaulve airlift.
Truman rose in politics
But be waa caned liy critics
through the Kansas City "soft on Olmm111ilm" for
Pendergast machine to the dlmnlaalng tho Aller Hill case
U.S. Senate and finally to 88 a "red herring;" hls Ollila
become RooseVelt's runrilng policy and the ftrlng of warmate In 1944. As vice prelldenl time hero Gen. Douslaa
House In Key BiScayne would reports of vast destruction to
Peraons wishing to contribute may mail cllecks to Wahama le1111than three montba, he had MacArthUr.
comment on this report, and Hanoi and Haiphong came only
High Scbool, Mason, marking them for the Wahama Band Fund. little time to prepare himlelf
Born May 8, 111M in a frame
the U.S. cOilllllM&lt;I would not from Communi•t news
' Two cars were damaged and failing to yield right of way.
The band, &lt;ilrected by Gl!ralcl Slmmona and Char ea Yeaso, for tl\e awiiOmt dull~ that hollll In !II• town of Lamar In
two drl\lers were cited to Both drivers were ~ken. -by has a merntier' of 85.ln addition, 15 others would make the trip, late ~ Gil~ .
• JOtillrtriiii(Jnlll'l. 'I'~ ,a
lo"..W.W.
f "'".,
• .-..'¥:if.;~· mayor's Cllllft as the r41Bult of private car to Veteraos including chaperones, Ute principal, Booster Club officers and
He later admitted he had age four mov~ with bli
an accident on East Main St., Memorial Hospital for· treat- directors. Estimated coSt is approximately ~ a person.
be'en told ,noth!n8 about the psrenta to Ind8penda1ee, Mo.
Pomeroy, at 6:40p.m, Monday. ment of minor injuries.
A chartered bus would depart from Wabama High School existence of an 1tomlo bomb Hecalledlthome!orthereltof
Pomeroy police . said '·a car
until the day afler he wu hla life.
•
driven by Robert Hemsley, · Police also investi~ated a Thursday, January 18 and return the night of January 20.
sworn
In 88 Prealdent,
Hla parenll · pve him a
By UDlted Press lnteruatiooal
Long Bottom, pulled from Ute second accident on Second St.
Faced with the choice of an middle tnltlel S, with no period,
MANAGUA - '111E GOVERNMENT AGREED today to Landmark Service Station into
Saturday.
A
car
driven
by
invasion of Japan by U.S, land to stand for either of hls
consider usinl! force to drive reluctant survivors of the Managua Ute path or a vehicle driven by
Connie
Radford,
Pomeroy,
was
forces or unleashlns Ute newly grandfather• whose names
earthquake from their ruined city. A Latin American relief of. Ronald Mullins, 31, Pomeroy.
pulling
from
a
parking
space
developed
atom bomb, Tfurnan were Slipp and Solamon.
ficial suggested such action to remove survivors from areas in M:lllins, stopping to a'void a
when it was struck by a car
approved Ute nuclear attacka
Truman wanted to go to Weat
danger of epidemics and shortages of food and water.
collision, was struck from the driven by Dwight Logan,
on Hiroshima and Napaakl Point, but was tlll'lled down
An official ilource said a Venezuelan relief official suggested rear by a car driven by
Pomeroy.
The
Radford
car
A
fire
of
undetermined
origin
ners' home and a mobile home that killed thouundJ of because of poor eyetlgbt. Afler
what he .called "gunpoint evacuation" at a meeting Monday Charlene Barton, 25, Mason.
graduating from blah school,
night at the residence of Gen. Anastasio Somoza, the commander There was heavy damage to then hit a parked car owned by leveled a garage and two were saved after a determined civilians.
Gladys Walker, Pomeroy. outbuildings at the home of Mr. effort.
"It was a military dec!Jion," he worked at variOUJ Jobll
of the national guard and military strongman of Nicaragua. The
Barron's vehicle and medium Damage to the Radford car and Mrs. Joe Turner on Vine
At 3:15a.m., Pomeroy's Fire he said later. "No other course around Kanajls City before
suggestion came as authorities - and hundreds of foreign relief to Mullins'.
being comrniJsloned In the
was
heavy,
to
the
other
St.,
Middleport,
early
today.
Dept. responded to a call for was conceivable."
. workers- grappled with ino:easing problems of health, housing
•
Charlene Barton was cited vehicles, light.
Miss Radford . Middleport firemen, called help. There is no fire hydrant . In the confron~tion with
(Continued on page 12)
and feeding of residents who survived the powerful earthquake for failure to maintain assured
was cited for failing to yield at 2:21 a.m., found the blaze on Vine St., so Middleport
which sh.attered Managua !at~ Saturday.
clear distance and Hemsley for right or way.
was out of control. The Tur· firemen fought the blaze by
using a relay system from
JUNEAU, ALASKA -SEARCH VESSELS criss-crossed the
Beech St. Pomeroy was called
stormy GuH of Alaska today searching for survivors amidst the
to
assist with the relay, to bring
floating debris of a Liberian cargo ship that carried 33 Korean
water, and to assist generally.
crewmen. Navy C130 aircraft spotted an oil slick, some debris
Robert D. (Bob) Craig, 52, the son of the late Harry and
The Turner car was in Ute
and all four capsized lifeboats of the bUlk carrier Pacrover
garage when the fire s~rted widely known Middleport Edna L. Brown Craig. He was a
Monday in heavy seas 750rnlles south of Kodiak Island.
but was removed by a neigh· resident, died at his home at member of the Middleport
One search plane remained at the scene during the night,
Gregory Dean LodWick, 19, Started and LodWICK'S body Mrs . Harry Lodwick, Sr.,
along with two commercial vessels. Two Coast Guai'd cutters Chester, died Sunday ap-· was found over an em- Chester, and a nephew, Jeffrey hor. Antique furniture, lawn 829 Page St., in Middleport Church of Christ and was a
furniture and tools were lost in Monday evening. Mr. Craig 'veteran of World War li having
and the Canadian weather ship Quadra were en route. "We're !J&lt;!renUy from injuries suffeted bankment. He was taken to Roush, Pomeroy.
Ute structures. It was not had been In falling health a served witli\he U.s. Army. He
still continuing an intensive search in the area," a Coast Guard when he was struck by a car as Veterans Memorial Hospital
The sheriff's dept. was known this morning U Mr. and number of weeks, conllned to was a former Middleport
spokesman said. "We're looking for survivors or liferafts." The he Wlllked along State Route 7, by the Chester emergertcy
notified of the accident at 6:15
Liberian registered 13,()()0.(on ship radioed it was sinking Sunday one-tenth of a mile south of squad but was pronoW!ced p.m. The body arrived at Mrs. Turner have Insurance Ute Holzer Medical Center. He village councilman and for 32
was dead upon the arrival of years had worked as a
covering the losses.
and crewmen who managed lo get aboard a liferaft WQUld have Route 248 at Chester.
dead on arrival from multiple Veterans Memorial Hospl~l at
the MiddJeport emergency boilermaker. '
faced wind-whipped seas of up to 55 feet.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's injuries.
6:55p.m.
squad al his home. He had only
Surviving are his wife,
depariment said a car driven
The department concluded
Foneralservlces will be held
recently improved enough to Martha Jean Searls Craig;
AT. LEAST 28 PERSONS lost their lives in traffic-related by Mrs. Mabel E. Johl)son, Lodwick was walking on Route at 3 p.m. Wednesday at the
leave
the hospi~i.
three daughters, Jennifer Sue,
mishaps In Ohio during the long Christmas weekerid, turning Long Bottom, apparently 7 when he was hit.
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Born
Sept.
15,
1920
at
Cynthia
Jean and Patricia Lee,
holiday happinei!S Into despair for many families. Four of the struck Lodwl~k. Mrs. Johnson
Surviving are his parents, Rev. Robert Card officiating.
Ravenswood, W. Va. , he was all at home; a son, Stephen D.
deaths during the 78-bour period were caused· by carbon told officers she, "felt her car Juanita and Harry Lodwick of
Burial will be In Chester
Temperatures
!slUng
Ill
the
(Duffy) Craig, at home; a
monoxide poisoning. The Ohio Highway Patrol lists asphyxiatlort had hit something," and she Chester; two brothers, Richard
Cemetery. Friends may call at middle to upper 2Us by evening. mY//hW'P):WZ.Y/////.$WH'.a~ brother, Harry Douglas Craig,
victims in the traffic toll when such deaths occur in motor stopped the vehicie to In- and James, Chester; a sister, the funeral home any tirr\e. In
Cloudy, chance of snow Durries
Jr., Las Cruces, New Mexico ;
EXTENDED FORECAST
vehicles on public property.
vestigate.
Diane Roush, Pomeroy Route Ueu of Dowers, the family in the norUteast . and partly
Thursday , Tbroueh a nephew, several aunts, unTwo Athens Olunty teenagers died of carbon monoxide
However, she foond nothing, 3; his maternal grandparents, requests that donations he sent cloudy elsewhere. Lows in Ute
Salurday, mostly cloudy cles and cousins.
poisoning Sunday in their car along Ohio 329 east of Athens. They and proceeded home from Mrs. Millie Cunningham,
to the Meigs County Com- lower 2Us in Ute east. Cloudy Thursday through Saturday
Funeral services wlll he held
were identified as Dennis Tabler, 18, and Raymond Waters, 18, where she notified the sheriff's Pomeroy, and John Bolin, Atmunity Clas8 which Ute young Wedmisday . High In the lower with a chance of ahowers at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
both of Stewart.
office. An investigation was ens; his paternal grandmother, men attended.
30s.
Thursday and Friday. Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
Daytime highs In the middle with the Rev. Raulin !,foyer
to lower 40s Ia the north aDd officiating. Burial will he in
in the upper 401 In the Gravel Hill · cemetery at
southern sectiou Thursday Cheshire. I'riends may call at
and Friday. lowering Ill the the funeral home after )0 a.m. ·
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The March, but it went nowhere in
Systeou Olallejlged
bases are unfair because weal- unconstitutional.
Education Association, which upper 301 and lower 401 Wednesday.
incoming chairman of the Qhio the Republlcan-Oominated
Some ii4 school districta with thy districts receive more
No Waterlog Down
has made court challenges Ill Saturday. Overulght Iowa in
House Education Committee House.
taxable valuation in excess of school aid for their taxing
"We want to get some dis- Ohio's heavy reliance on the middle to lower 30s in the
plans
to
re-introduce
Now, the Democrats will he f25,000 per pupil would, to their effort.
cussion and facts before us and property taxes to finance northern sectlou and the ·Unit called out
legislation to revamp the In charge and Pease will he chagrin, have to merge with
Pease said he expects a U.S. see what naws thtll'e are in the schools, to back his proposal, upper 301 to lower 40s In the
state's school financing chairman of the ~catlun nearby dl.stricts and spread the SUpreme Court ruling on the bill," Pease said. "We want to but the position of Gov. John J. soulb.
The Pomeroy ER squad ·
system, bu! he still is unsure of Committee, to which the bill wealth.
lay the ' groundwork for
matter by May 15.
llipn has not yet been made ;-;-;::::.;:::::'*'O't~h~b.'/.WJWJ •JJ•; e•ea answered a call to the Meigs
Its prospects despite hill new will undoubtedly he a1181gned.
County lnfiqnary at 8:25 i.m.
The basic
guarantee
"II is go_ing to ~ke some im· passage. There may be some
bile.
Pease's bill seta up a me. would go frmn S800 per pupil to petua from the court saying we changes in the figures we UBed
position of power.
today for George Hawk, a
The General Assembly has
chanlam
to
fW'IIIah
equallltate
Rep. Donald J. Pease, !).()bpatient, who 1\'88 ill. He wu
$150 per pupil, 1 and school . have to do thi.:l," Pea,e said. last year. "
been confronted with two other
erlin, said Monday he will offer subsldlea for &lt;:ompsrable lax districts oou1d then adopt addi. "The legislature is not likely to
taken to Velera1111 Mi!mOrlal
But Pease said In theory hla major issues Involving the prothe bW gain next month in . effort In aU 6:15 local school tiona! propa l) taxea up io 4$ force consolidation of . these solution to the problem is "a perty
Hospl~l next door.
MOTHER STABBED
~x.
Uniform
hopes of getting some court dlstrlcll in Ohlo.
At 10:42 p.m. Sunday, the
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Mrs.
mllla and receive up to $315 per wealthy districts if it doesn't pure solution, and I'm not assessments were spaced out
Thirty mltls of property pupil extra. One mill eltra have to."
pressure behind it by Apil or
going to water it down before I through 1977 under a bill Regina J. Bonner, 24, Cln·· squad went to the carl Delonc
~xation would he tht balance would bring In $25 per pupil In
May.'
ciQnati, was found slabbed to , residence on Route 143 fer
Pease said his committee introduce it."
enacted Utls year.
The bill, as Peaae deecrihes point. About 150 average and state fundi.
"If the court5 say we have to
wiD hold hearings on · the
And the question assessing death In her home here Sun· Nora Bobo, who - W. llle
It, Ia an attempt to "ellmlnate poor school dlstricta levying
Schoolflnance.wytems In Cal· legislation so It can act do this, then the way I've got it agricultural land on the basis day. Pollee aatd no arrests had waa broqbt to P0111•07,
lhe effect of prGIItl;ly tax dif. more than this 811101111t would lfomla, Tnu, New Jersey and promptly if the court ruling is the most painless way," he of current use rather than mar· been made bllt reported they 1 trallllferred to 811 llllbullnol,
on school operating he required to reduce taxea Minnesota have been challeng- indicates ,Ohio's public school said.
ket value was put off until next were searching for the victim's • and taken to the Bol&amp;er
budgets." He put it in l88t without lll8lng any lltate funds. ed on grounds property tax Onancing system could be held
Medical Center.
husband and children.
Pease can expect the Ohio year.

2 Drz·v··.er,s cz·.ted

1

0
oWI.T'"" "

ews:J,R Briefs .·

Two homes saved

Bob Craig dies

Young man killed

'.&gt;

'I N EASY

\

'

by Crooks &amp; LawreD;oe .
.-----.~~~~~~~

GNAT!'7~ WHAT A t\I!.JI~ANC~~

,

6ETTIN6 .5TRIWDE() J=;ROM
WA?H'~ CAR IN THIS. ~ll..!-Y

,.-.. ·

PART'! CO~TVME!

..

Weather

.

Pease ·still wants equfal school taxing system

EtL..AZE:~! ... I.
~!=EM TO HAVS

?TAR.TLE:D

HIML

NOT EXACTLY,.,
IT~ 'THAT BIG

BIJ~IIJE~5 TYCOON,

v,P. MFI&lt;EEH

state

rerentills

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